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WEEKLY MARKET REPORT Week Ending 1st March, 2019 AWEX Northern Micron Indices Comparison
THINGS BACK TO NORMAL?? An 8 sale run of rises for the EMI came to a halt this week as the market drifted by 11 cents to 2016, the best start to the year since 2006. With Chinese mills not operating in South Africa and their decision to hold wool sales this week and our local volume lifting by 8,500 bales in the space of 4 days due to last sale’s big gains many theories were being touted as to what might happen. Could the market lose 10/15% in SA and our market following suit here with the European orders heading across the Indian Ocean to what may have been a substantially cheaper market or stay here to support our market?? When will the Chinese resume buying in SA? Growers and brokers were understandably worried about this week’s outcome on both sides of the Indian Ocean. The market held up well as a cheaper opening trend led to a stronger finish to see 18.5s and finer up to 10 cents cheaper while broader microns gave back 25 to 35 cents. It was interesting to note Fremantle had both days of increases. Merino skirtings had a solid sale to finish in sellers’ favour. Crossbreds had a mixed week as the finer and very broad types gained 20 cents while 28/30micron lost 10 cents. Cardings gave up 10 to 15 cents for most types in this sector. The market in SA was nowhere near as bad as predicted, just a 0.6% fall and, worthy of note, the big top-maker from China (Tianyu) bought 1700 bales this week, headed to who knows where!! Considering the events over the past few weeks global wool markets looked to have dodged a bullet. The suspension of sales in SA and the embargo from Chinese Customs on their wool imports could have led to a massive fall in their market with the potential repercussions felt here as buyers chased the potentially cheaper wool in SA. This didn’t eventuate as the good selection of finer types were in good demand from Europe. In no real surprise to anyone the release of testing figures for February from AWTA was down 5.5% from the previous season’s weight of wool tested. This has the year-on-year decline at 11.2%; auction offerings are at 13.4% lower than last season (174,000 bales) or 4/5 selling weeks. We sell late on Wednesday next week as the national volume drops slightly to 46,000 bales. Market direction is still hard to pick but plenty of business was written on Wednesday night that didn’t really flow through to the sale room on Thursday - hopefully next week.
Ag Concepts Fwd Prices as at 1 March 2019
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Main Buyers (This Week)
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