Monthly average EMI end SEPTEMBER 2017 - Australian … · Sep-07 Sep-08 Sep-09 Sep-10 Sep-11...

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Offering—Aust. only Bales offered 39,657 Passed-In % 8.2 % Bales Sold 36,406 Season Sold 401,805 Currency movements AUD:USD 0.7813 - 1.90% AUD:CNY 5.2101 - 0.75% AUD:EUR 0.6663 - 0.57% RBA close rate Thurs 28th Sept 2017 Eastern Market Indicator (EMI) AUD 1522 ac/kg - 3 ac/kg - 0.20% USD 1189 usc/kg - 26 usc/kg - 2.09% CNY 79.30 ¥/kg - 0.76 ¥/kg - 0.95 EUR 10.14 €/kg - 0.08 €/kg - 0.76% Scheduled Australian Wool Auction Sales Sale week commencing 2017/18 forecast 2016/17 actual Week 14 02/10/2017 40,587 bales 36,849 bales Week 15 09/10/2017 40,277 bales 29,372 bales Week 16 16/10/2017 43,450 bales 34,556 bales AWEX Auction Micron Price Guides. Sales held Tues 26th, Wed 27th,Thurs 28th Sept ‘17 MPG Sydney Melbourne Fremantle 17mic 2238 +10 2199n +19 - 18mic 2072 = 2078 +13 1988n 19mic 1791 +13 1790 +15 1789 +15 20mic 1597 +9 1604 -8 1606 +18 21mic 1532n -8 1524 -24 1537 -2 22mic 1477n = 1476n -14 1483n -15 23mic - 1444n +5 - 24mic - 1296n - 25mic 1192n = 1198n - 26mic 1093n -8 1103n +3 - 28mic 798 -15 813 = - 30mic 558n -28 563 -10 - 32mic 379n -12 388n -12 - MCard 1142 +29 1139n +22 1150n +1 Riemann Wool Platform- Forward trades past week Maturity month Type Price Trade weight November 2017 18.5 micron 1920 5,000 November 2017 19.0 micron 1750 / 1760 15,000 November 2017 21.0 micron 1520 10,000 December 2017 18.5 micron 1910 10,000 Total 40,000 kgs Sale Week 13: Fri 29th Sept ‘17 450 500 550 600 650 700 750 800 850 900 950 1,000 1,050 1,100 1,150 1,200 1,250 1,300 1,350 1,400 1,450 1,500 1,550 1,600 Sep-07 Sep-08 Sep-09 Sep-10 Sep-11 Sep-12 Sep-13 Sep-14 Sep-15 Sep-16 Sep-17 Monthly average EMI end SEPTEMBER 2017 AUD USD Linear (AUD) Linear (USD)

Transcript of Monthly average EMI end SEPTEMBER 2017 - Australian … · Sep-07 Sep-08 Sep-09 Sep-10 Sep-11...

Page 1: Monthly average EMI end SEPTEMBER 2017 - Australian … · Sep-07 Sep-08 Sep-09 Sep-10 Sep-11 Sep-12 Sep-13 Sep-14 Sep-15 Sep-16 Sep-17 ... week. id early in the week at 1530 the

Offering—Aust. only

Bales offered 39,657

Passed-In % 8.2 %

Bales Sold 36,406

Season Sold 401,805

Currency movements

AUD:USD 0.7813 - 1.90%

AUD:CNY 5.2101 - 0.75%

AUD:EUR 0.6663 - 0.57%

RBA close rate Thurs 28th Sept 2017

Eastern Market Indicator (EMI)

AUD 1522 ac/kg - 3 ac/kg - 0.20%

USD 1189 usc/kg - 26 usc/kg - 2.09%

CNY 79.30 ¥/kg - 0.76 ¥/kg - 0.95

EUR 10.14 €/kg - 0.08 €/kg - 0.76%

Scheduled Australian Wool Auction Sales

Sale week

commencing

2017/18

forecast

2016/17

actual

Week 14 02/10/2017

40,587 bales 36,849 bales

Week 15

09/10/2017 40,277 bales 29,372 bales

Week 16

16/10/2017 43,450 bales 34,556 bales

AWEX Auction Micron Price Guides.

Sales held Tues 26th, Wed 27th,Thurs 28th Sept ‘17

MPG Sydney Melbourne Fremantle

17mic 2238 +10 2199n +19 -

18mic 2072 = 2078 +13 1988n

19mic 1791 +13 1790 +15 1789 +15

20mic 1597 +9 1604 -8 1606 +18

21mic 1532n -8 1524 -24 1537 -2

22mic 1477n = 1476n -14 1483n -15

23mic - 1444n +5 -

24mic - 1296n -

25mic 1192n = 1198n -

26mic 1093n -8 1103n +3 -

28mic 798 -15 813 = -

30mic 558n -28 563 -10 -

32mic 379n -12 388n -12 -

MCard 1142 +29 1139n +22 1150n +1

Riemann Wool Platform- Forward trades past week

Maturity month Type Price Trade weight

November 2017 18.5 micron 1920 5,000

November 2017 19.0 micron 1750 / 1760 15,000

November 2017 21.0 micron 1520 10,000

December 2017 18.5 micron 1910 10,000

Total 40,000 kgs

Sale Week 13: Fri 29th Sept ‘17

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Sep-07 Sep-08 Sep-09 Sep-10 Sep-11 Sep-12 Sep-13 Sep-14 Sep-15 Sep-16 Sep-17

Monthly average EMI end SEPTEMBER 2017

AUD

USD

Linear (AUD)

Linear (USD)

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AWI Commentary

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Australian wool auctions this week followed along the same trend as

has been seen for the past two or three weeks. Super fine and fine

Merino types remain well sought after whilst the medium Merino

types continue to drift. Crossbred wools are still struggling to find a

stable level of trade, but the carding sector is enjoying good times and

prices continue upwards under strong demand. Within all these minor

adjustments to wool values, the AWEX EMI (eastern market indicator)

barely moved and concluded the series of sales this week at 1522ac/

clean kg or 3ac lower.

Those buying in USD (US Dollars) were the major beneficiaries of the

week's activity with the USD EMI 2% lower at 1189usc/clean kg. This

reduction was due almost entirely to the USD v AUD forex (foreign

exchange) rates being favourably lowered by 1.9% week on week.

Rather than the AUD being weak, it was the strength of the USD

against the AUD and most other major currencies that produced the

significant change.

Due to public holiday schedules differing across the Australian states

this coming week, auctions were staged over three days, which in

some ways helped the relative stability of pricing as only Wednesday

was loaded up with quantity. The wool buyer's approach to the week

could be described as cautious as most exporters appear to be oper-

ating to careful price sensitive strategies. Under this purchase method,

it is more the price of inventory intake, rather than volume that is the

priority.

Sentiment remains positive and new business is seemingly available in

adequate volume to maintain the current market, but the risk appetite

profile of exporters to take on forward sales without coverage is low.

As the industry finances are being stretched, risk taking takes a back

seat, as many trading participants predominantly focus on and ser-

vice their major client's immediate needs. The aim is to turn sales over

safely, even at perceptively low profit margins.

The current late winter/spring has failed to produce any significant rain

across most or our wool growing areas, so the drought conditions con-

tinue to worsen daily. While the current shearings are producing very

nice wool clips, albeit with growing Pobm (position of break in the mid-

dle) readings, the further into the spring/summer shearing the strength

and yield readings are also likely to fall away, but Pobm results will get

better the closer to Christmas/New Year we get. Presently, in the su-

perfine area we are seeing discounts of up to 80ac clean kg for high

Pobm readings (roughly 75pobm and higher), and in the 19mic and

broader area up to 50ac/clean kg. The longer (100mm plus) wools are

most affected as they produce a progressively larger CVH% (co - effi-

cient of variation in hauteur %) result.

Merino fleece types within the 20 micron and finer area gained a gen-

eral 20ac/clean kg for the week, whilst conversely 21 micron and

broader fell away by 15 to 20ac/clean kg. Skirtings followed the pattern

of their Merino fleece counterparts and the Merino carding sector

continues to strengthen daily and by week's end a decent 25 to 30ac

was added to their values. Crossbred types and descriptions struggled

to maintain their level for 28 micron and finer, but wools broader than

28 micron fell by 15 to 20ac.

Next week in Australia we have 40,500 bales scheduled to be offered.

Similar operations and sale results to this week are expected as next

week is considered the last week which allows fulfilment of September

shipment commitments. Some minor instability may occur as buyers fill

outstanding orders and then reassess their forward positions.

AUD Commentary - SAW

It was a tough week for the Aussie Dollar against a surging USD, as it fell from Monday’s high of .7964 to a six week low Thursday low of .7800, before lifting Friday morning to .7856. The AUD also fell quite sharply against a basket of 3rd currencies.

A steep fall in coal and Iron Ore prices to a three month low this week added further pressure, with Iron Ore today hitting $62.90 a tonne. The good news out of the U.S kept on coming, as overnight an upward revision to GDP growth to 3.1% put it on track to see the fastest growth since 2015, and this helped the S&P500 and Dow Transport Indexes hit new record highs.

The two major pieces of news this week were the strong endorse-ment for President Trumps proposed multi-trillion dollar “Tax Package” which if passed would bring in the biggest changes in nearly 30 years, and Fed Chair Janet Yellen’s comments that U.S rates need to rise despite the uncertainty of the inflation path.

In Australia domestic news was also positive, as ABS Data showed Job Vacancy Rates soaring, rising by 6% to 203,700 and lifting to 15.4 percent in August quarter from 9.5 percent in the corre-sponding period last year. Chief Economist at Westpac, Bill Evans again said the market has it wrong in pricing not only one, but two rate hikes over the next 12 months. He think that rates will not only be left unchanged at 1.5% next year, but in 2019 as well. Evans says rates will remain on hold as Australia works through tepid economic growth, heavy debt, a lack of wage pres-sures, ongoing consumer caution and a slowdown in China’s econ-omy.

Technical View: Greg McKenna, chief market strategist at AxiTrad-er, said that the AUD could face “substantial downside” should the modest recovery in the USD go up a gear in the days ahead .“I expect that to be the case a rally of 2-3% from here. That would-suggest an AUD/USD could test 7740/50 support, and then per-haps even the next 0.7650. The market is marginally oversold at the moment and a further small bounce is likely before another slide.

An up and down week at auction and the forward markets. The forwards traded near cash in November and December before falling away. The split auction days increased the choppy market outcomes. Forward volumes were only moderate as both buyers and sellers looked for direction. Support at auction Thursday saw more bidding interest and the forward curve flatten into Christmas on the finer qualities. 19.0 micron traded early in the week at 1760, then down to 1750 before closing Thursday bid at 1770. Middle microns particularly 21.0 microns eased in the spot market over the week. Bid early in the week at 1530 the 21s traded at 1520 slightly under the closing quote. We expect the curve to remain flat next week into the Christmas recess. Interest in the New has moderated due to the increased volatility. Anticipated trading levels next week should present growers ample opportunities to hedge through summer at histori-cally sound levels.

18.5u 19.0u 21.0u October 1920 1770 1510 November 1920 1770 1510 December 1920 1760 1510 Jan to March 1900 1740 1490 April to June 1880 1700 1450

Southern Aurora Wool Forwards report