Normally wool offerings begin to decline at this time of the year, however the recent increase in prices has encouraged growers who had held wool over to now come forward and offer.
Despite the documented challenges of shipping, global lockdowns and extended exporter finance requirements, the improved market of recent times resulted in another week of solid sales clearance.
The EMI continued to improve lifting 7ȼ/kg to 1434ȼ/kg. The Aussie dollar was marginally stronger, lifting slightly on last week to 0.699 US, resulting in a modest lift in the EMI in US terms to 1004 ȼ/kg.
The merino microns 17 to 19.5 posted small increases in the range of 2 to 12ȼ/kg in Melbourne, while a more animated market in Sydney showed a 2 to 32ȼ/kg lift for the same micron range. 16.5 & 20 to 22 MPG’s were all firm to slightly easier.
The Western Market Indicator (WMI) also improved, lifting 13ȼ to finish the week at 1515ȼ. The last time the WMI was above 1,500 cents was in March 2020. All indicators in the west lifted between 12 to 59 cents, except for the 21 MPG which eased 5 cents.
Crossbred wools battled with the 28 & 32 MPG giving up 15 & 10 cents respectively, while the other crossbred indicators were quoted as firm. Cardings on the other hand were well bid with AWEX reporting an average of 19 cents lift across the selling centres.
Another solid offering of over 40,000 bales, with 37,461 sold of the 41,298 offered resulted in a pass-in (PI) rate of 10.3%, slightly up on last week’s number. Crossbred wool impacted the overall sale PI rate. Of the 7,900 bales offered, 1,425 did not meet grower reserves and was passed-in, 18% of the crossbred offering.
This week on Mecardo Andrew Woods looked at Vegetable Matter (VM). VM levels remain high by historic standards across most micron categories, although they have eased slightly for 20–21-micron May levels. Consequently, VM discounts remain high, and are likely to do so until the after the mid-season break in auctions.
The week ahead….
Next week there’s another big offering rostered, with 46,392 bales currently listed for sale with all centres are selling on Tuesday & Wednesday.
When wool buyers walked into selling centres to start the week, Australian wool was more expensive for exporters before bidding began. This set the tone
In November Mecardo looked at crossbred wool volumes, price and gross sale value which showed an increased volume of wool sold at auction accompanied by
Independent analysis and outlook for wool, livestock and grain markets delivered to you as it’s published
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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.
Improved market attracts sellers
The EMI continued to improve lifting 7ȼ/kg to 1434ȼ/kg. The Aussie dollar was marginally stronger, lifting slightly on last week to 0.699 US, resulting in a modest lift in the EMI in US terms to 1004 ȼ/kg.
The merino microns 17 to 19.5 posted small increases in the range of 2 to 12ȼ/kg in Melbourne, while a more animated market in Sydney showed a 2 to 32ȼ/kg lift for the same micron range. 16.5 & 20 to 22 MPG’s were all firm to slightly easier.
The Western Market Indicator (WMI) also improved, lifting 13ȼ to finish the week at 1515ȼ. The last time the WMI was above 1,500 cents was in March 2020. All indicators in the west lifted between 12 to 59 cents, except for the 21 MPG which eased 5 cents.
Crossbred wools battled with the 28 & 32 MPG giving up 15 & 10 cents respectively, while the other crossbred indicators were quoted as firm. Cardings on the other hand were well bid with AWEX reporting an average of 19 cents lift across the selling centres.
Another solid offering of over 40,000 bales, with 37,461 sold of the 41,298 offered resulted in a pass-in (PI) rate of 10.3%, slightly up on last week’s number. Crossbred wool impacted the overall sale PI rate. Of the 7,900 bales offered, 1,425 did not meet grower reserves and was passed-in, 18% of the crossbred offering.
This week on Mecardo Andrew Woods looked at Vegetable Matter (VM). VM levels remain high by historic standards across most micron categories, although they have eased slightly for 20–21-micron May levels. Consequently, VM discounts remain high, and are likely to do so until the after the mid-season break in auctions.
The week ahead….
Next week there’s another big offering rostered, with 46,392 bales currently listed for sale with all centres are selling on Tuesday & Wednesday.
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Data sources: AWEX, AWI, 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.