Friedrich Sturm Report - 20.05.05
What happened this week: In the two weeks following
Interest was spread across the board but – as usual – the selling of bulls, and in particular of ox/heifers, has been substantially easier than the sales of cows. The inquiry for heifers remains impressive. Shoe and automotive tanners show a particular need for this type of material which now is, unfortunately, in the lowest production season of the year, so many had to leave unsatisfied. The price spread between heifers and cows is consequently widening further, reflecting the current leather market situation where standard upholstery leathers are still in the doldrums. Dairy cows needed the seller’s full attention for hides to be moved and one can only hope that shipments will be made according to the contracts, ensuring a secure product flow over the next few months.
We are still affected by the difficulties in obtaining acceptable price levels. Taking the official price levels of US dairy cows into consideration, one should have been able to get about 10% more for the hides that were finally obtained. So, selling prices are stuck in the middle of the normal trading range of $45-50 for standard products and weights. Fortunately, the currency was not an added burden which made the ‘take it or leave it’ decision a little easier. As a result, we still have no answer to the question whether the European cows are too cheap or the
Good quality extra heavy weight cows face fewer problems and are still well received by European upholstery tanners. There was also considerable interest in cheap and light kips. Although always a price and quality battle, one can generally find a number of interested parties to choose from, in particular from
The kill: The kill remains steady but at low levels. A holiday last Monday cut into the total production again and average weights, especially for bulls, are falling rapidly. These developments are not helping the current situation. We have a good reason to believe that in the coming weeks there will be no improvement in numbers.
What do we expect? For over eight months we have not seen a price variation of more than 5% and there is no reason why this should change in the forthcoming weeks. While bulls and heifers continue to stay on rock solid ground, cows remain below 40 kg under latent pressure which is only eased by the firmer US dollar. The battle here is fought between the European sellers and Asian tanners, as we no longer expect any movements from Europe. The situation is bound to remain difficult.
|
Type |
Weight range |
Avg. green weight |
Salted weight |
Avg. weight salted |
Price per kg green weight |
Trend |
|
Ox/heifers |
15/24.5 kg |
22.0/23.5 kg |
13/22 kg |
20/21 kg |
€ 1.50 |
Steady |
|
|
25/29.5 kg |
27.5/28.5 kg |
22/27 kg |
25/26 kg |
€ 1.35 |
Steady |
|
Dairy cows |
15/24.5 kg |
22.5/23.5 kg |
13/22 kg |
20/21 kg |
€ 1.45 |
Weaker |
|
|
25/29.5 kg |
27.5/28.5 kg |
22/27 kg |
25/26 kg |
€ 1.28 |
Weaker |
|
|
30/+ kg |
33.5/35.5 kg |
27/+ kg |
29/31 kg |
€ 1.18 |
Weaker |
|
Bulls |
25/29.5 kg |
27.5/28.5 kg |
22/ 27 kg |
25/26 kg |
€ 1.52 |