Coarse Wool Monthly Price - Russian Ruble per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
May 2013 - Jun 2025: 398.780 (117.15%)
Chart

Description: Wool, coarse, 23 micron, Australian Wool Exchange spot quote, Russian Ruble per Kilogram

Unit: Russian Ruble per Kilogram



Source: International Monetary Fund

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Coarse wool is a category of sheep wool with relatively larger fiber diameter, commonly used in durable textiles, carpets, upholstery, insulation, felts, and industrial fabrics. In commodity markets, it is typically priced by fiber diameter and cleanliness, with a benchmark such as coarse wool at 23 micron quoted in US cents per kilogram. The CIF UK basis reflects delivered pricing into the United Kingdom, a long-established trading and processing center for wool. Unlike fine apparel wool, coarse wool is valued more for strength, resilience, and bulk than for softness. Its market is shaped by the physical characteristics of the fleece, including micron count, staple length, crimp, color, and contamination from grease, vegetable matter, and burrs. Because wool is a renewable animal fiber, supply depends on flock biology and shearing cycles rather than mining or annual field planting. Coarse wool also competes with synthetic fibers in many end uses, especially where durability and cost matter more than luxury hand feel.

Supply Drivers

Coarse wool supply is determined by sheep populations, breed composition, pasture conditions, and the biological pace of fleece growth. Major producing regions include Australia, New Zealand, parts of South America, South Africa, and selected areas of China and Central Asia, where extensive grazing systems support sheep husbandry. Coarser fleeces are often associated with dual-purpose or meat-oriented breeds, so wool output is linked to broader livestock economics rather than wool alone. Seasonal shearing schedules create a natural supply rhythm, and weather affects both fleece quality and clip volume through feed availability, drought stress, and contamination from dust or vegetation. Disease, parasites, and animal welfare constraints can reduce fleece quality or animal numbers, while transport distances and rural infrastructure influence the cost of moving greasy wool to scouring and export facilities. Processing also matters: wool must be classed, baled, and often scoured before it can be traded efficiently. Because flock rebuilding takes time, supply responds slowly to price signals, and biological constraints limit rapid expansion.

Demand Drivers

Demand for coarse wool is driven by industrial and household uses that value durability, resilience, and insulation. Carpets and rugs are important end uses because coarse fibers provide abrasion resistance and springiness. Upholstery, blankets, felts, mattress pads, and insulation products also absorb coarse wool, especially where flame resistance and moisture management are useful. In many applications, wool competes with polyester, polypropylene, nylon, cotton, and other natural fibers; substitution depends on price, performance, and regulatory standards. Demand is therefore sensitive to construction activity, furnishing cycles, and manufacturing output, rather than to apparel fashion alone. Wool also has a seasonal element because cold-weather textiles and bedding can lift consumption in cooler periods, though industrial demand is less seasonal than clothing demand. Income growth can support higher-quality textile consumption, but coarse wool often serves practical uses where affordability and technical properties matter more than luxury appeal. Environmental preferences for renewable fibers can support wool demand in some segments, while synthetic fibers remain strong substitutes because of lower cost and consistent specifications.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Coarse wool prices are influenced by broad manufacturing conditions, exchange rates, and freight costs because the trade is internationally priced and physically shipped across long distances. A stronger US dollar tends to make dollar-denominated wool more expensive for non-dollar buyers, affecting import demand and auction bidding. Wool is a storable commodity, so inventory financing, warehouse costs, and shipping delays can shape nearby and deferred pricing relationships. When supply is tight relative to processing demand, prompt delivery can command a premium; when stocks accumulate, the market can move into a carry structure that reflects storage and financing costs. Wool also has some linkage to general textile and consumer goods cycles, since downstream mills adjust purchases based on order books and working capital conditions. It is not a classic inflation hedge, but it can reflect broader changes in industrial activity, transport costs, and currency values.

MonthPriceChange
May 2013340.41-
Jun 2013355.574.45%
Jul 2013330.68-7.00%
Aug 2013318.52-3.68%
Sep 2013350.8910.16%
Oct 2013365.594.19%
Nov 2013367.380.49%
Dec 2013366.61-0.21%
Jan 2014371.101.22%
Feb 2014377.831.81%
Mar 2014369.50-2.20%
Apr 2014358.89-2.87%
May 2014363.801.37%
Jun 2014361.52-0.63%
Jul 2014371.592.79%
Aug 2014371.860.07%
Sep 2014380.062.20%
Oct 2014401.685.69%
Nov 2014449.6011.93%
Dec 2014531.3918.19%
Jan 2015596.1712.19%
Feb 2015577.13-3.19%
Mar 2015526.79-8.72%
Apr 2015468.36-11.09%
May 2015499.896.73%
Jun 2015566.9713.42%
Jul 2015551.07-2.80%
Aug 2015632.5614.79%
Sep 2015600.73-5.03%
Oct 2015557.93-7.12%
Nov 2015596.936.99%
Dec 2015662.7611.03%
Jan 2016727.799.81%
Feb 2016740.831.79%
Mar 2016690.20-6.83%
Apr 2016681.97-1.19%
May 2016650.69-4.59%
Jun 2016661.781.70%
Jul 2016703.056.24%
Aug 2016711.811.25%
Sep 2016684.42-3.85%
Oct 2016640.54-6.41%
Nov 2016656.262.46%
Dec 2016624.55-4.83%
Jan 2017612.87-1.87%
Feb 2017601.81-1.80%
Mar 2017613.181.89%
Apr 2017558.04-8.99%
May 2017582.164.32%
Jun 2017618.416.23%
Jul 2017651.255.31%
Aug 2017700.437.55%
Sep 2017666.33-4.87%
Oct 2017654.67-1.75%
Nov 2017678.283.61%
Dec 2017685.971.13%
Jan 2018737.417.50%
Feb 2018805.039.17%
Mar 2018802.09-0.37%
Apr 2018867.938.21%
May 2018961.7710.81%
Jun 20181,061.7110.39%
Jul 20181,049.50-1.15%
Aug 20181,081.843.08%
Sep 20181,080.98-0.08%
Oct 20181,005.82-6.95%
Nov 2018998.46-0.73%
Dec 20181,013.061.46%
Jan 20191,032.711.94%
Feb 20191,064.763.10%
Mar 20191,031.73-3.10%
Apr 20191,003.88-2.70%
May 2019957.47-4.62%
Jun 2019916.99-4.23%
Jul 2019867.21-5.43%
Aug 2019878.701.32%
Sep 2019873.61-0.58%
Oct 2019729.61-16.48%
Nov 2019737.151.03%
Dec 2019731.35-0.79%
Jan 2020735.830.61%
Feb 2020732.31-0.48%
Mar 2020745.231.76%
Apr 2020668.79-10.26%
May 2020584.16-12.65%
Jun 2020564.73-3.32%
Jul 2020587.854.09%
Aug 2020531.09-9.65%
Sep 2020461.25-13.15%
Oct 2020595.3829.08%
Nov 2020632.866.30%
Dec 2020625.15-1.22%
Jan 2021641.912.68%
Feb 2021685.806.84%
Mar 2021705.012.80%
Apr 2021700.76-0.60%
May 2021685.23-2.22%
Jun 2021696.751.68%
Jul 2021672.91-3.42%
Aug 2021646.85-3.87%
Sep 2021632.87-2.16%
Oct 2021637.020.66%
Nov 2021656.373.04%
Dec 2021670.542.16%
Jan 2022715.806.75%
Feb 2022721.950.86%
Mar 2022957.9532.69%
Apr 2022709.72-25.91%
May 2022579.98-18.28%
Jun 2022538.77-7.11%
Jul 2022528.94-1.83%
Aug 2022521.91-1.33%
Sep 2022488.66-6.37%
Oct 2022482.43-1.28%
Nov 2022480.10-0.48%
Dec 2022546.8813.91%
Jan 2023634.5116.02%
Feb 2023692.549.15%
Mar 2023686.72-0.84%
Apr 2023733.326.78%
May 2023711.51-2.97%
Jun 2023701.65-1.39%
Jul 2023756.737.85%
Aug 2023834.9210.33%
Sep 2023814.19-2.48%
Oct 2023808.12-0.75%
Nov 2023783.99-2.99%
Dec 2023843.417.58%
Jan 2024805.94-4.44%
Feb 2024799.51-0.80%
Mar 2024810.781.41%
Apr 2024820.261.17%
May 2024799.24-2.56%
Jun 2024794.84-0.55%
Jul 2024765.64-3.67%
Aug 2024783.552.34%
Sep 2024790.580.90%
Oct 2024846.947.13%
Nov 2024877.023.55%
Dec 2024892.461.76%
Jan 2025883.93-0.96%
Feb 2025839.53-5.02%
Mar 2025810.17-3.50%
Apr 2025781.15-3.58%
May 2025753.50-3.54%
Jun 2025739.19-1.90%

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Chargeurs
Website: http://www.chargeurs.fr/
Location: Paris, France

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