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             05/11/07           
              Foot and mouth restrictions in August and September have resulted
                in a significant backlog of up to 400,000 head of lambs and 19,000
                prime cattle across Great Britain, according to the latest analyses
                from the English Beef and Lamb Executive (EBLEX) which expects
              this backlog to have grown still further through October. 
              
               
            With over-hangs of this size to be cleared in late 2007 and early
              2008, producers can expect a continuing knock-on effect of FMD
              on both market prices and volatility in the coming weeks. All the
              more so since the average carcase weight of lambs sold deadweight
              this autumn has been a good 4% higher than the same period last
            year. 
            Overall, clean sheep slaughterings in England and Wales were 30%
              lower than 2006 in August and 15% down in September, with liveweight
              sales hit particularly badly. While live trade volumes have since
              recovered sharply, sale levels over the first three weeks of October
              have still been 60% below last year. What is more, sales of the
              heaviest lambs (over 45.5 kg liveweight) have increased markedly,
              putting further pressure on the market. 
            Not surprisingly perhaps given the acute disruptions to live markets,
              the EBLEX analyses show liveweight prices have been affected to
              a noticeably greater extent than deadweight values. At 80p/kg,
              the average SQQ price for finished lambs in the first three weeks
              of October was 28% down on the trade before FMD. In contrast, carcases
              averaged 207p/kg over the same period - or only 20% down on the
              level recorded before FMD. Even so this remains a very disappointing
              11% below the long-term average for the time of the year. 
            Even greater falls have been recorded in the lighter weight lamb
              categories as a result of export restrictions which cut UK exports
              by 5200 tonnes or 67% in August alone and resulted in some 200,000-250,000
              more sheep being directed to the domestic market. 
            The relative seasonality of marketings means the cattle trade
              has been proportionately less affected by FMD than the sheep sector,
              with prime cattle slaughterings down 7% on 2006 in both August
              and September. 
            Cow disposals have, however, seen a far greater impact, with year-on-year
              slaughterings down 37% in August and nearly 14% in September -
              a total of almost 17,000 cows less than 2006 over the two months. 
            Prime cattle prices in England and Wales remained notably stable
              throughout the outbreak, actually increasing from around 200 p/kg
              deadweight just before FMD to 205 p/kg by the end of September.
              Although this could easily change for the worse as the backlog
              of stock comes onto the market in the coming few weeks, the effect
              of increased marketings may well be offset by the normal seasonal
              rise in beef prices. 
            In contrast, cow prices have been on a seesaw - plunging from
              an average of 140 p/kg deadweight just prior to the first case
              of FMD to 118 p/kg in mid-August and bouncing back to nearly 140
              p/kg with the lifting of initial restrictions only to fall back
              to 114p/kg with the second wave of sanctions. 
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