MEAT SLUMP.
COMPANIES IN EXPLANATION PEOD.UCESS ARE PERTUEBED. Some of the farmers in the Wellington district are complaining about tho prices being offered by the freezing companies' buyers for tho season just opening. It appears (says the Manawatu Daily Times) that the companies have reduced the prices to be offered for most classes of meat about one-eighth of a penny. Less is being offered for wether mutton, and the reduction is greater for ewe mutton and lamb. The Gear, the biggest company in the district, has not yet fixed its prices definitely, and until it docs so it may be impossible to say with any certainty what the prices for the season will be, It is admitted by the companies that this reduction in prices is being made, and for reasons which arc serious enough. First of all, the costs of operating have increased considerably. Wages, have risen, coal is dear i and the supply precarious, and most of the works have erected additional , storage, which will not be necessary after trade has once more become normal. In addition, the companies are faced with uncertainty as to the markets for their most important, by-products, tallow and pelts, It is known that the pelt market has. gone to smash in America since the armistice was signed, and in England there has also been a slump. The price for pelts will steady down to something considerable soon, but the war values are not at all likely to be maintained. There are about 30,000 tons of tallow in the country at present, and still there is no news of any great quantity being shipped imi mediately. Even if the price were to i be maintained, the loss in charges incurred by the companies on so much tallow would ,it is urged, be sufficient to warrant a reduction in the prices to" be offered now. But there is no 'certainty that the war prices will be maintained. It is expected that they will drop considerably. It is well known that during the war the high price of tallow has been due to the need for glycerine. Before the war glycerine was a byproduct of soap. In war-time glycerine has been the principal product. Canada and America will not take the tallow. The Meat Trust lias tallow for sale, and it has money and influence in America. In any case it { is believed by the export people here that it was the influence of the Trust which prevented the Canadian Government from allowing New Zealand tallow to come info that country But the most imoprtant of all the reasons which make reduced prices certain this year is that the output from the works must be smaller. The season opened in 1916 with empty sctores, in 1917 the stores were almost empty, this year they are about three-quarters full. With the ship-
ping in sight it will not be possible for the companies to go on at the usual rate for very long. It has happened in other seasons that the keen competition has forced prices up above the rates offered at the beginning of the season. There will be no keen competition for stock this year. The works do not want meat early in the season. ' Much has been said about the great number of ships to come here in the near future. Ths Devon, which is now on the coast, but which has not yet begun to load, was announced here as a November ship. The experience of past years has been that ships do not arrive until months after due date, and the big fleet of which so much is expected will not be able to give relief, to the crowded stores until. April' at.,,thc- earliest' and the .worst of the crush will be at tho end of February
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Bibliographic details
Taihape Daily Times, 6 January 1919, Page 6
Word Count
636MEAT SLUMP. Taihape Daily Times, 6 January 1919, Page 6
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