It was a strong week in the wool market to follow the turnaround of last week, with the Eastern Market Indicator (EMI) lifting 24 cents for the week.
The improved market was widespread, with all indicators posting gains. Again, special note was made by AWEX of the “strong demand for best style/low VM fleece types”.
The EMI improved 24ȼ/kg to 1401ȼ/kg. The Australian dollar was weaker down marginally by 0.06ȼ to US$0.714, which saw the EMI in US dollar terms up 16 US cents to 997ȼ.
There was a very even spread of improvement however a 51ȼ/kg lift in Melbourne for the 21 MPG and 55ȼ/kg for 18.5 MPG in Sydney were the standouts.
The Western Market Indicator (WMI) also had a strong week, lifting 43ȼ to finish the week at 1473ȼ. All indicators were stronger in the west, up between 17 & 45ȼ, with the 19 to 21 MPG’s the most impressive.
AWEX noted that year to date there has been $2.1 billion worth of wool sold at auction, up from $1.7 billion for the same period last year. This is an impressive result in the face of significant global challenges exporters have faced to arrange logistics and finance.
Crossbred wools were firm to slightly dearer, while cardings were also dearer at all centres, gaining 17ȼ in Sydney, 5 ȼ in Melbourne and an impressive 39ȼ/kg in Fremantle.
The offering this week was 40,153 bales, and with a low pass in rate of 6.0% resulting in 37,751 bales sold. This is just ahead of the weekly average clearance, however 5,700 fewer than last week.
On Mecardo this week Angus Brown took another look at MLA & AWI’s latest data report on the flock. The report identified that in the short term there are likely to be more meat breed lambs on the market, and we have already seen this to an extent.
However, looking at the longer-term trend, fewer merinos basically mean less fine wool. It is concerning that in a flock rebuilding phase, merino numbers appear to be shrinking.
The week ahead….
Next week all centres are selling on Tuesday & Wednesday with 42,779 bales rostered for sale.
Wool markets opened to underwhelming demand across all centres as the trade approaches Winter and the end of the 2023/24 selling season. Although it is
In mid-2022 Mecardo looked at the international supply of sheep meat (albeit from a limited number of countries) showing how lower supply had positively correlated
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Join the Mecardo team for the Commodity Conversations podcast, where we provide short weekly market recaps and longer conversations with guests to discuss the drivers and trends in livestock, grain and fibre markets.
In this report for LiveCorp and MLA, we analysed the historical trends in the demographics of the Australian sheep flock, examining domestic factors that influence farm-level enterprise decision making.
We don’t just bring you the most up to date market insights. Find out more about Mecardo’s services including risk management advisory, modelling, benchmarking, research & consultancy.
A strong week for the wool market
The EMI improved 24ȼ/kg to 1401ȼ/kg. The Australian dollar was weaker down marginally by 0.06ȼ to US$0.714, which saw the EMI in US dollar terms up 16 US cents to 997ȼ.
There was a very even spread of improvement however a 51ȼ/kg lift in Melbourne for the 21 MPG and 55ȼ/kg for 18.5 MPG in Sydney were the standouts.
The Western Market Indicator (WMI) also had a strong week, lifting 43ȼ to finish the week at 1473ȼ. All indicators were stronger in the west, up between 17 & 45ȼ, with the 19 to 21 MPG’s the most impressive.
AWEX noted that year to date there has been $2.1 billion worth of wool sold at auction, up from $1.7 billion for the same period last year. This is an impressive result in the face of significant global challenges exporters have faced to arrange logistics and finance.
Crossbred wools were firm to slightly dearer, while cardings were also dearer at all centres, gaining 17ȼ in Sydney, 5 ȼ in Melbourne and an impressive 39ȼ/kg in Fremantle.
The offering this week was 40,153 bales, and with a low pass in rate of 6.0% resulting in 37,751 bales sold. This is just ahead of the weekly average clearance, however 5,700 fewer than last week.
On Mecardo this week Angus Brown took another look at MLA & AWI’s latest data report on the flock. The report identified that in the short term there are likely to be more meat breed lambs on the market, and we have already seen this to an extent.
However, looking at the longer-term trend, fewer merinos basically mean less fine wool. It is concerning that in a flock rebuilding phase, merino numbers appear to be shrinking.
The week ahead….
Next week all centres are selling on Tuesday & Wednesday with 42,779 bales rostered for sale.
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Data sources: AWEX, ICS, Mecardo
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Independent analysis and outlook for wool, livestock and grain markets delivered to you as it’s published
Listen to the podcast
Join the Mecardo team for the Commodity Conversations podcast, where we provide short weekly market recaps and longer conversations with guests to discuss the drivers and trends in livestock, grain and fibre markets.
Research: Analysis of the Australian sheep flock
In this report for LiveCorp and MLA, we analysed the historical trends in the demographics of the Australian sheep flock, examining domestic factors that influence farm-level enterprise decision making.
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We don’t just bring you the most up to date market insights. Find out more about Mecardo’s services including risk management advisory, modelling, benchmarking, research & consultancy.