
Sheep trade: Heavy ewe and hogget price cuts this week
This week's sheep trade has seen processors move to cut prices for ewes and hoggets and hold spring lamb prices for the first half of the week.
Up to 50c/kg has been cut from both cull ewe and hogget prices this week, with hogget price now having fallen €1.30/kg since the start of April.
The price cuts come ahead of the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha on Friday, June 6, and many farmers had expected price rises in the sheep trade in advance of this, but to date this has failed to materialise.
Factory prices
This week, Kepak is quoting €7.35/kg plus a 15c/kg Quality Assurance (QA) bonus for hoggets up to 23kg carcass-weight, leaving €7.50/kg on offer here. This offer is back 50c/kg from last Monday.
The Athleague, Co. Roscommon-based factory is quoting €8.85/kg plus a 15c/kg QA bonus for spring lambs up to 21kg carcass-weight leaving €9.00/kg on offer here – the same price as last week.
Kepak is quoting €5.00-€5.10/kg for cull ewes up to 46kg carcase weight. This price is back 50c/kg from last week.
Irish Country Meats (ICM) is quoting €9.00/kg plus a 20c/kg QA bonus for spring lambs up to 21kg carcase weight leaving €9.20/kg on offer here until Tuesday, May 27. This price is at the same level as last week.
The Navan, Co. Meath and Camolin, Co. Wexford based outlet is quoting €7.50/kg plus a 20c/kg QA bonus for hoggets up to 23g carcase weight leaving €7.70/kg on offer here. This price is back 30c/kg from last week.
ICM is quoting €5.00/kg for cull ewes – back 50c/kg from last week.
Kildare Chilling has no official quotes this week but sources have told Agriland the outlet is paying €7.50/kg for hoggets and €8.80-9.00/kg for QA spring lambs. It is understood the processor has less interest in cull ewes this week but is paying €5/kg for these.
Eid lifts sheep trade at Kilkenny Mart
There was a smaller sale of sheep at Kilkenny Mart today (Monday, May 26) with 350 head on offer.
Speaking to Agriland after the sale, auctioneer George Chandler said: 'Spring lambs met a better trade this week especially ram lambs which attracted more interest due to the Eid al-Adha festival.'
Spring lamb prices at the sale peaked at €227/head for 10 lambs averaging 48kg. Another pen of 10 ram lambs weighing 42kg made €184/head.
Hoggets made from €180-200/head in the sale with 25 hoggets weighing 59kg each making €200/head. Another 19 hoggets weighing 66kg each made €199/head.
Cull ewes made from €70-320/head in the sale.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Examiner
15 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Ballymore chief Sean Mulryan outlines plan to transform Athlone into green '15-minute city'
The founder of property firm Ballymore Sean Mulryan has proposed a plan to develop Athlone into a green '15-minute city' with a population of 100,000 in the next 15 years. Mr Mulryan has formed a steering group to look into the plan, which would see the TUS Athlone campus cater for up to 25,000 students as a centre of excellence in green technology and to construct 20,000 zero carbon homes in its first phases. It envisions road networks tailored for electric driverless buses, with 90% of Athlone's energy resources coming from renewable sources. "Our vision could drive genuine balanced distribution of the impending population growth in Ireland and offer a blueprint for sustainable, education-led, employment-driven, and environmentally focused urban development nationwide," said the Ballymore chair and chief executive, who is from Roscommon. 'We are sharing that vision now with wider Irish society, and we will do all we can to help it become a reality. But this plan needs to be driven from the top by government – by this administration and by the successor governments that take office in the years ahead – if it is to come to pass.' The new steering group for the plan sees Mr Mulryan joined by former chair of the Revenue Commissioners and chair of the governing body of Technological University of the Shannon, Josephine Feehily; Goldman Sachs private equity co-head and chair Adrian Jones, CAlchelyst chief Joan Kehoe, former DCU president Prof. Brian MacCraith,Iirhs Rail chief Jim Meade, and Ballymore deputy managing director Linda Mulryan-Condron, who is Mr Mulryan's daughter. Ballymore Group was established in 1982 by Mr Mulryan and has built 35,000 houses across Ireland, the UK, and Europe.


Irish Independent
a day ago
- Irish Independent
Irish staff data ruling ‘may open door' to more US tax probes, experts warn
Last month, an American judge told Dublin-headquartered Eaton, a power systems multinational, to ignore GDPR rules and hand over controversial employee-performance evaluations to the IRS following a long-running legal dispute. The IRS hopes to use the evaluations to judge how much work Irish-based staff were doing on some of its intellectual property (IP), potentially showing whether Eaton was being taxed correctly or not. Reacting to the judgment, Brendan Murphy, tax lead and partner at Baker Tilly Ireland, said some multinationals will worry that the ruling could 'open the door' for more IRS investigations into the work of Irish staff. 'Where does it stop then if the US takes that aggressive route? When does the EU step in to try and support companies by saying that we don't agree with this aggressive approach by the US, that these companies do have their transfer pricing work done and these profits do deserve to remain in that country. 'You could end up in a tax authority versus tax authority argument.' Murphy warned that US tax authorities could focus on companies that moved IP to Ireland between 2014 and 2020. He added the judgment appeared to weaken the protections provided by GDPR. 'I'm surprised that the US court was allowed to be so flippant in overruling it [GDPR] and say that they hold authority, as such. It'll be interesting to see if the EU courts have something else to hit back with on it.' With the judgment now calling on Eaton to hand over the employee- performance files, Murphy is hopeful they will bolster the argument that its Irish staff were properly supporting the IP functions and that no transfer pricing adjustment would be required. However, if the US courts find otherwise, it could lead to more US 'attacks' on transfer pricing studies. In that case, Murphy said it would be important for Ireland to defend itself. Jo Joyce, a partner at Taylor Wessing Ireland and lead on technology, IP and information, said the US judgment could create an expectation that the IRS's demands outweigh 'legitimate EU privacy concerns'. 'This case is quite specific on its facts but could be used as a wedge to open the door for broader claims and requests, giving less weight to GDPR than has historically been the case,' she said. 'US courts are aware of the controversy around sharing data with the US and have not historically been keen to disregard European privacy law in such a frustrated way as this judge seems to have done. 'There is a risk of a precedent being set and this being the first chink in the armour that leads to further and broader requests.' The case stems from an IRS audit of Eaton's 2017-2019 tax returns, which focused on whether the company improperly shifted IP to Ireland, where corporate tax rates are lower.

The Journal
2 days ago
- The Journal
John Magnier advisor denies being 'kept in the loop' about Tipperary land owners' tax affairs
A SENIOR ADVISOR to bloodstock billionaire John Magnier has denied that he was 'kept in the loop' regarding the tax affairs of the owners of a large tract of land in Tipperary that his boss wanted to buy. Eddie Irwin, the financial advisor at the Coolmore Stud, which Magnier founded, rejected a description of him by counsel for Barne Estate, Martin Hayden SC, as Magnier's 'fixer' and 'right-hand man'. He said Coolmore did not use 'catchphrases or fancy titles' but agreed with counsel that he would be called to work on projects if things went 'wrong'. Irwin, who has 40 years' experience working with Magnier, was called in to aid in securing the Barne Estate deal, which the Magniers believed they had shaken hands on in August 2023 for €15m. However, the Magnier side was ultimately gazumped by Irish-born, US-based construction magnate Maurice Regan, who offered €22.25m. The case centres on Magnier's claim that Regan engaged in a 'full-frontal assault' on the claimed deal to buy the 751-acre tract and that Barne Estate reneged on the deal. The Estate has been held for the benefit of Richard Thomson-Moore and others by a Jersey trust. At the High Court yesterday, Irwin said he met with the benefactor in September 2023 and contacted tax experts from KPMG after the family requested advice. A KPMG tax expert met with the Thomson-Moore family later in the month as a 'favour' to Coolmore, who were large clients of KPMG. Irwin did not attend that meeting, but allegedly sent a WhatsApp message to Magnier claiming that the Thomson-Moores were considering whether to retain the tax expert from KPMG, who was named in court. Advertisement He added that the expert had informed the Thomson-Moore family of what approach he recommended. He denied making an 'off-the-record' remark that the expert would keep him 'in the loop' in return for introducing him to the family. Irwin said that the wording of a WhatsApp message to Magnier, telling him 'off the record' about the family's intention to retain the man, was 'unfortunate' and that what he meant was for Magnier not to share the information. Irwin told counsel that the named expert was an 'innocent, decent and honourable' man, who was being 'defamed' in the court as someone who would keep him 'in the loop' on private tax matters. He said that he did have 'grave' concerns over the tax issue raised by the Thomson-Moore family at the time as it was just before the end of an exclusivity agreement and may not have been a genuine one. Irwin said he sought legal advice following the expiration of the agreement, on 23 September 2023, after he claimed that Regan had contacted Magnier's son-in-law 'angry and abusive' over the handshake deal and said he would outbid the pact by €5m. In early October 2023, with the exclusivity agreement now expired, the local estate agent involved in the sale told the Magniers that the Barne Estate had been subject to a €20m bid. The Magnier side then upped their bid to €16m with a separate, additional offering of €500,000 to establish a trust for a member of the Thomson-Moore family. Irwin said he was told by the auctioneer that the Thomson-Moore's were happy to accept the offer. But the Barne Estate solicitors never sent the contracts and the deal was never done. The Magnier side has sued the Barne Estate, Thomson-Moore and three companies of IQEQ (Jersey) Ltd group, seeking to enforce the purported deal, which they say had been 'unequivocally' agreed. The Barne defendants say there was never any such agreement, as they needed the consent of trustees to finalise any agreement, and subsequently they preferred to sell the estate to Regan, who is not a party to the case. The case continues before Mr Justice Max Barrett next month. Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal