Friday 26th February 2016 |
Text too small? |
New Zealand wool prices gained at auction as lower volumes underpined prices.
Clean 35-micron wool, a benchmark for crossbred wool used for carpets and accounting for the majority of New Zealand's production, increased to $5.95 per kilogram at yesterday's South Island auction, from $5.73/kg at last week's combined North and South island auctions, and 13 percent higher than a year ago, AgriHQ said.
Volumes on offer at the sale were 38 percent lower than the same time last year, and 89 percent of the total 8,616 bales were sold, AgriHQ said. The country is forecast to have a 4.4 percent drop in wool auction volumes this season as the national wool clip declines in line with lower sheep numbers and after farmers focused more on meat producing sheep breeds.
Most wool types lifted in the latest auction, with the exception of lambs wool which declined to $6.60/kg from $6.73/kg last week, AgriHQ said.
Trade data published today showed the value of New Zealand wool exports jumped by a third in January to $59 million, compared with the same month a year earlier. In the 12 months to the end of January, wool exports rose 9.9 percent to $828 million, making it the country's 14th largest commodity export.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
No comments yet
Meridian welcomes Government reforms
October 1st Morning Report
Heartland publishes Annual Report, Climate Report and NOM
SCL - Scales increases ownership of Australian Joint Ventures
Cooks Coffee Company Trading Update
September 30th Morning Report
Devon Funds Morning Note - 29 September 2025
Synlait confirms Bright Dairy vote received
SML - FY25 Results, North Island Assets Sale & Annual Meeting
September 29th Morning Report