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Western Australia’s Pricing Rebalance: Sheep Converge, Cattle Lag

by | Feb 20, 2026 | Cattle, Feedlots, Processing, Sheep

Western Australia’s Pricing Rebalance Sheep Converge, Cattle Lag

by Dean Hubbard

Western Australia’s livestock pricing story currently reflects two distinct dynamics , a clear reset in sheep and lamb, and a persistent but narrowing discount in cattle.

Three years ago, WA sheep markets experienced structural dislocation. Mutton traded at barely one-third of national levels, accelerating ewe liquidation and flock contraction. Today, that pricing relationship has materially improved. WA mutton is now trading close to 90% of national benchmarks, while trade lamb sits within 97-98% of national pricing. The east–west gap that defined the previous cycle has largely closed, shifting the incentive from exit toward disciplined expansion.

Cattle, however, remain a WA-specific challenge. Processing cow prices have improved from roughly two-thirds of national levels in 2024 to around 82% in 2026 year-to-date. While the gap has narrowed, it remains significant. Importantly, other eastern states, including South Australia ,remain broadly aligned with national pricing, reinforcing that the discount is largely WA-centric.

The trend suggests the divide is not immovable, but structural competition and stronger alternative demand channels will be critical in determining whether WA cattle pricing continues to converge