Lamb Monthly Price - Uruguayan Peso per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
May 2016 - Mar 2026: 115.135 (77.76%)
Chart

Description: Meat, sheep (New Zealand), frozen whole carcasses Prime Medium (PM) wholesale, Smithfield, London beginning January 2006; previously Prime Light (PL)

Unit: Uruguayan Peso per Kilogram



Source: Meat Trade Journal; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Lamb is the meat from young sheep and is traded in several forms, including live animals, boxed cuts, and frozen carcasses. In commodity-market references, lamb is often quoted on a carcass-weight basis, with the benchmark “Lamb, frozen carcass Smithfield London, USD per kg” representing a standardized wholesale reference for imported or traded frozen product. Pricing in US dollars per kilogram allows comparison across exporting and importing regions and across different cut specifications. Lamb is used primarily as a food protein, with demand concentrated in household consumption, food service, and ethnic cuisines where sheep meat is a staple. It is also processed into chilled and frozen retail products, further cut into primal and retail portions, and used in prepared foods. Because lamb production is tied to biological breeding cycles and pasture conditions, its market structure differs from grain or oil markets and is shaped by livestock biology, feed availability, and seasonal slaughter patterns.

Supply Drivers

Lamb supply is determined by sheep breeding, flock size, pasture conditions, and the time required to raise animals to slaughter weight. Major producing regions include Australasia, parts of Europe, the Middle East, and South America, where sheep are suited to grassland, marginal land, and mixed farming systems. In many systems, lamb output follows seasonal breeding and lambing cycles, so slaughter availability is uneven through the year. Weather affects both pasture growth and animal health: drought reduces forage, while cold or wet conditions can increase mortality and lower weight gains. Disease, parasites, and predator losses also influence supply, especially in extensive grazing systems.

Feed costs matter because lamb finishing often depends on grain or high-quality pasture. Transport and cold-chain infrastructure are important because lamb is frequently shipped frozen or chilled over long distances. Processing capacity, export certification, and carcass grading standards can create bottlenecks between farm output and market supply. Biological constraints are persistent: gestation length, lambing rates, and flock replacement cycles limit how quickly producers can expand output. Sheep can be raised on land less suitable for crops, but that advantage also means supply is sensitive to land quality, rangeland management, and climate variability.

Demand Drivers

Lamb demand is driven by household food consumption, restaurant use, and cultural or religious dietary traditions in which sheep meat has a long-established role. It is often consumed as a premium or specialty meat relative to chicken and some pork cuts, so demand can be more income-sensitive than for lower-cost proteins. In many markets, consumers substitute between lamb, beef, goat, pork, and poultry depending on price, availability, and culinary preference. Lamb also competes with mutton and other sheep meats, with younger animals generally preferred for tenderness and milder flavor.

Seasonality matters because consumption often rises around holidays, festivals, and communal meals, while supply is shaped by breeding and slaughter calendars. Processing preferences also influence demand: carcass balance, cut yields, and fat content affect suitability for retail, food service, and further processing. In regions with strong sheep-meat traditions, demand is supported by stable culinary habits rather than by rapid growth in per-capita consumption. In broader protein markets, lamb’s role is limited by its higher production cost and smaller scale relative to poultry and pork, which makes it more exposed to substitution when household budgets tighten.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Lamb prices are influenced by exchange rates because international trade is commonly invoiced in US dollars, while production costs are incurred in local currencies. A weaker local currency can support export competitiveness, while a stronger currency can reduce it. Feed, labor, transport, and energy costs affect producer margins, especially where finishing depends on purchased grain or refrigerated logistics. Because lamb is a storable frozen product, storage and shipping costs matter, and seasonal supply patterns can create periods of tighter or looser nearby availability. That can produce familiar inventory effects in which prices reflect the cost of carrying product through time. Broader inflation also matters through its impact on feed, freight, and retail pricing, while demand can soften when consumers shift toward cheaper proteins.

MonthPriceChange
May 2016148.06-
Jun 2016143.20-3.28%
Jul 2016132.29-7.62%
Aug 2016134.851.93%
Sep 2016138.953.04%
Oct 2016135.32-2.61%
Nov 2016143.976.39%
Dec 2016147.292.30%
Jan 2017144.15-2.13%
Feb 2017145.550.97%
Mar 2017143.59-1.35%
Apr 2017147.112.45%
May 2017151.903.25%
Jun 2017152.290.26%
Jul 2017156.252.60%
Aug 2017158.671.55%
Sep 2017165.244.14%
Oct 2017166.931.02%
Nov 2017165.95-0.59%
Dec 2017166.160.13%
Jan 2018159.82-3.81%
Feb 2018171.227.14%
Mar 2018170.46-0.44%
Jan 2022405.93138.13%
Feb 2022386.33-4.83%
Mar 2022386.01-0.08%
Apr 2022370.34-4.06%
May 2022355.33-4.05%
Jun 2022335.90-5.47%
Jul 2022346.933.28%
Aug 2022344.91-0.58%
Sep 2022347.380.72%
Oct 2022316.45-8.90%
Nov 2022260.32-17.74%
Dec 2022237.10-8.92%
Jan 2023240.651.49%
Feb 2023258.417.38%
Mar 2023273.445.81%
Apr 2023280.012.40%
May 2023274.41-2.00%
Jun 2023239.61-12.68%
Jul 2023205.98-14.03%
Aug 2023214.684.22%
Sep 2023228.176.28%
Oct 2023220.95-3.16%
Nov 2023207.93-5.89%
Dec 2023209.010.52%
Jan 2024207.05-0.94%
Feb 2024203.34-1.79%
Mar 2024199.40-1.94%
Apr 2024199.32-0.04%
May 2024199.05-0.14%
Jun 2024197.13-0.96%
Jul 2024205.264.12%
Aug 2024211.352.97%
Sep 2024225.726.80%
Oct 2024232.733.11%
Nov 2024247.256.24%
Dec 2024256.993.94%
Jan 2025254.89-0.82%
Feb 2025243.93-4.30%
Mar 2025237.19-2.77%
Apr 2025248.854.92%
May 2025253.531.88%
Jun 2025261.913.30%
Jul 2025254.97-2.65%
Aug 2025249.83-2.02%
Sep 2025249.44-0.16%
Oct 2025252.711.31%
Nov 2025256.481.49%
Dec 2025249.35-2.78%
Jan 2026253.631.72%
Feb 2026251.44-0.86%
Mar 2026263.204.67%

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