|  02/10/06
          
           The National Beef Association is advising feeders not to allow processors
            to take the easy way out and react to supermarket pressure on higher
            than expected prime cattle values by lowering payments to farmers.
           
            
            NBA chairman, Duff Burrell 
             
             
            
            
                | 
             
           
           It says price tension within the beef sector is mounting because
            retailers are trying to protect their margins by creating a situation
            in which slaughterers put a squeeze on finishers instead.
            “Determined efforts are being made to force down the income
            of an unprofitable industry so we are advising feeders to toughen
            up and hold back their cattle until the short market reasserts itself
            and the reality of the supply situation becomes obvious,” explained
            NBA chairman, Duff Burrell . 
           “Creating the illusion of a falling market, so finishers
            push through more cattle to avoid being caught if the price drops
            further, is a tactic that abattoirs have successfully employed in
            the past.” 
           “But processors are already doing a very good job of disguising
            just how short cattle supplies really are and we are confident that
            careful marketing by farmers, in which cattle are only released to
            customers who pay full whack, will very quickly result in better
            prices and a more accurate reflection of the real balance between
            supply and demand.” 
           “Abattoirs must be discouraged from habitually taking money
            from the farmer as soon as they are caught in a price vice. Cattle
            cannot be too dear if their value does not cover their cost of production,
            so slaughterers who feel hard done by must turn to the retailers
            they supply and persuade these companies to put up more money instead.” 
           “There are many reasons finishers should feel confident that
            the market is undersupplied and if necessary, they should make determined
            efforts to search out the exporting abattoirs in their region and
            sell more cattle to them, and other non-supermarket buyers so that
            the message that they want, and need, realistic payments for their
            unsubsidised cattle really does hit home,” Mr Burrell added. 
          
                Seriously short farm assurance cover on Republic of Ireland beef  
  European
              Focus On Beef And Lamb 
   NBA
              asks Bord Bia for clarification on beef
            exports to UK  |