Excellent news first, heavy lambs closed the week at 1124¢/kg, lifting by 3¢/kg for the week. For the primary time this spring, Victorian and South Australian yards had been among the many NSW choices when it got here to prime throughput numbers for heavy lambs, however complete numbers for the indicator stay under year-ago ranges. Heavy lambs ended final week 48% above the five-year common.
Bendigo, Victoria, had 20% of the heavy indicator throughput, with its complete sheep and lamb yarding rising by 15,000 on Monday. With no gross sales in NSW, processors had been out in pressure, and the Nationwide Livestock Reporting Service quoted it as the biggest single-day prime lamb sale when it comes to worth that the ability has hosted, with a gross of greater than $8 million. The closest a sale obtained to that determine at Bendigo final yr was $5 million. Export weight new season lambs topped $397, and heavy lambs averaged nicely above the nationwide worth at 1150¢/kg.
Commerce lamb numbers elevated by 8500 head, with the indicator dropping 20¢/kg for the week, each nationally and within the east. Wagga Wagga, NSW, yarded simply shy of 40% of all lambs eligible for the Japanese States Commerce Lamb Indicator, and averaged 1133¢/kg, in comparison with the ESTLI’s closing determine of 1143¢/kg. Forbes, NSW, was by far the standout, averaging 1247¢/kg with 21% of the throughput within the east. The climate got here into play on the restocker lamb entrance, with some producers deciding to dump and numbers elevated by greater than 15,000 head for the week, with the worth falling by 24¢/kg.
Mutton additionally misplaced 24¢/kg week-on-week however nonetheless closed on the highest year-on-year premium thus far in 2025, up 181% on the identical time final yr and about 90% stronger than each the 5 and ten-year common figures. The Nationwide Mutton Indicator ended the week at 778¢/kg, nonetheless at a premium to month-ago ranges. Mutton in NSW nonetheless averaged above 800¢/kg, but it surely was chalk and cheese from south to central, with Wagga Wagga sitting at 708¢/kg with 40% of the state’s throughput, and Forbes at 896¢/kg with 35%.
 
			







