NZ wool prices fall at weekly auction
Friday 09 December 2016 11:17 AM
NZ wool prices fall at weekly auction as supply exceeds expectations
By Tina Morrison
Dec. 9 (BusinessDesk) - New Zealand wool prices fell at the latest weekly auction as more bales than expected were offered for sale.
Some 59 percent of bales at the North Island auction yesterday comprised strong crossbred wool. The benchmark price for 39-micron wool fell to $3.90 per kilogram, which is 20 cents/kg below the comparable North Island auction two weeks ago and 60 cents/kg below last week's South Island auction, according to AgriHQ. The price is 34 percent lower than the same period last year and 28 percent weaker than the five-year average, AgriHQ said.
Some 9,400 bales were offered at yesterday's auction, 2,000 bales above the anticipated roster level. The 93 percent clearance rate was the highest for the season so far, which has averaged 74 percent.
"Most of the sales were transacted at a lower price level," said AgriHQ analyst Shaye Lee. "It's likely the low prices coinciding with greater supply this week attracted more buyer interest."
"Buyers’ appetite was towards those that meet their sourcing needs, with those fleeces not meeting their needs being discounted heavily," Lee said, noting strong crossbred fleeces with poor colour were back as much as 5 percent from the comparable North Island auction two weeks ago.
Both fine and strong crossbred wool declined from last week, with indicators showing fine wool down 1 percent and strong wool back 2 percent, she said.
"In the weak price environment, those offerings that fail to meet buyers’ quality specifications can be severely discounted," she said. "Those fleeces with high contaminants, such as vegetable matter or seed content, can be marked down heavily compared with the same wool type with low contaminants."
(BusinessDesk)