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Crossbred wool prices curves

As with merino wool, there is a wide range of crossbred qualities. Fibre diameter is one of those measures of quality, and for crossbred wool, it ranges from 20 to 40 microns. This is a wider range of microns than merino wool encompasses, with this in mind, let's look at crossbred price curves.

Mecardo looked at crossbred prices in detail last October (read here), noting that some signs of life had been observed after a torrid couple of years of depressed prices. In the season to date (to the end of February) crossbred volumes sold at Australian auctions were up by 14% in clean terms, so supply continues to exert downward pressure on prices.

Figure 1 shows the average crossbred fleece price series across micron categories (20 to 40 micron) drawn from Australian auction data for March 2023 and March 2024; a ten-year median price level for crossbred fleece, plus a merino series. The Merino series, a simple “all in” average price by micron, is added to look at relative prices where crossbred and Merino supply overlap.

The comparison of current crossbred prices and the ten-year median level clearly shows the weakness in the key Australian crossbred categories (26 to 30 micron). 34 micron in Australian dollar terms is currently very close to the ten-year median level, while the 28-micron category is 50% below the ten-year median. The gap narrows on the finer side, with 21-22 micron crossbred fleece trading only 3-9% below its ten-year median level.

In the shorter term, the broader crossbred fleece prices are up by 60 cents (20-25%) on year-ago price levels, with the 28-micron category up by 15 cents (5%) or so. Without the help of the weaker Australian dollar in US dollar terms, the 28-micron price is unchanged year on year and the broader crossbred categories are up by around US30 cents.

The price difference between the broader crossbred micron categories and 28 micron are trading at close to 20-year minimums, highlighting the relatively low level of the 26–29 micron category prices.

Mecardo looked at the correlation of a range of crossbred price series from different countries in February (read here), across a range of micron categories. This correlation of prices between crossbred wool from different countries is a reminder that when we look at supply and input its probable effect on price, we should really be looking at the consolidated supply from a range of countries, not simply Australia.

What does it mean?

Crossbred supply at Australian auctions remains plentiful and continues to pressure prices downwards. Despite this, the prices of broader micron categories have lifted compared to year-ago levels in US dollar terms, with no change in 28 micron. A weaker Australian dollar has helped push local prices up beyond the changes seen in US dollar terms. At this stage, the core Australian crossbred micron categories remain extremely cheap in relation to historical levels and to broader crossbred prices.

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Key Points

  • Broad crossbred prices are trading close to their ten-year median levels.
  • 26-28 micron crossbred prices are trading around half of their ten-year median levels.
  • Price differences between 28-micron and broader micron prices are close to 20-year minimums.
  • Prices have lifted in Australian dollar terms for the main Australian crossbred series, lifted by a weaker Australian dollar.

Click on figure to expand

Click on figure to expand

Data sources: AWEX, RBA, ICS, Mecardo

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