Fine Wool Monthly Price - Rand per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Dec 2017 - Jun 2025: -30.667 (-14.85%)
Chart

Description: Wool, fine, 19 micron, Australian Wool Exchange spot quote, Rand per Kilogram

Unit: Rand 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

Fine wool is a textile fiber obtained from sheep breeds selected for very small fiber diameter, typically measured in microns. In commodity markets, it is commonly priced by weight in US cents per kilogram, with benchmark quotations often referring to clean or greasy wool specifications and defined micron ranges. A widely used reference for international trade is fine wool around 19 micron, quoted on a CIF UK basis, reflecting delivered value into a major trading and processing center. The fiber is valued for softness, elasticity, crimp, and its ability to be spun into high-quality yarns and fabrics.

Fine wool is used primarily in apparel, especially suiting, knitwear, and premium garments, where handle and drape matter. It also appears in carpets, upholstery, blankets, and technical textiles. Because wool is a natural protein fiber, it competes with cotton, silk, and synthetic fibers such as polyester and nylon, while also serving niche markets where warmth, resilience, and breathability are important. Pricing reflects fiber diameter, staple length, strength, yield, and contamination levels, all of which affect spinning performance and end-product quality.

Supply Drivers

Fine wool supply is shaped by sheep genetics, pasture conditions, and the long biological cycle of flock management. Production is concentrated in temperate grazing regions where extensive sheep systems are viable, especially Australia, New Zealand, parts of South America, and selected areas of South Africa and China. Fine wool comes from breeds such as Merino and related crossbreeds, which are maintained for fiber quality rather than meat output. Because breeding decisions affect fleece characteristics over multiple generations, supply responds slowly to price signals.

Weather is a major structural influence. Rainfall, drought, heat stress, and cold affect pasture growth, animal health, and fleece condition. Wool quality can also be reduced by vegetable matter contamination, dust, and weathering, which raises processing costs. Shearing is seasonal and labor-intensive, and transport from remote grazing areas to ports and mills can create bottlenecks. Biological constraints matter as well: flock rebuilding takes time, and producers balance wool income against lamb and mutton returns. Disease, parasites, and animal welfare standards also influence costs and output. Unlike annual crops, wool supply is not reset each season; it reflects herd size, breeding choices, and land use over long periods.

Demand Drivers

Demand for fine wool is driven by apparel manufacturing, especially premium clothing where softness, comfort, and appearance are important. Fine wool is spun into high-count yarns for suits, dresses, knitwear, and luxury fabrics. It is also used in blends with synthetic fibers or cotton to combine warmth, wrinkle resistance, durability, and lower cost. Blending is a key substitution mechanism: when wool becomes expensive, mills often increase the share of polyester or other fibers, while higher wool quality can support premium positioning in finished goods.

Consumer demand is influenced by climate, fashion cycles, and income levels. Wool consumption tends to be stronger in cooler regions and in segments that value natural fibers and performance characteristics such as breathability and odor resistance. Industrial demand is steadier in carpets, upholstery, and insulation, though these uses are more price-sensitive and compete directly with synthetics. Seasonal buying patterns matter because garment production and retail stocking are linked to fashion calendars. Regulatory and technical standards also shape demand, including labeling rules, fiber-content requirements, and performance specifications in textiles. Because wool is a durable fiber, replacement demand is slower than for many agricultural commodities, and end-use markets depend heavily on the structure of the global textile industry.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Fine wool prices are influenced by exchange rates, especially the US dollar because international trade is commonly quoted in dollar terms. A weaker local currency in producing countries can support farm-gate returns, while a stronger dollar can affect import costs for mills. Wool also responds to broader industrial activity because textile demand depends on consumer spending and apparel production. Interest rates matter indirectly through inventory financing, since wool can be stored and traded through merchant stocks, creating carry costs that affect forward pricing.

As a storable soft commodity, wool can exhibit contango when storage, financing, and insurance costs exceed nearby scarcity, and backwardation when prompt supply is tight relative to mill demand. Price relationships with equity and bond markets are indirect, but wool often behaves more like a specialty agricultural raw material than a financial asset. Inflation can raise processing, freight, and labor costs, though the pass-through depends on downstream textile margins and substitution with synthetic fibers.

MonthPriceChange
Dec 2017206.55-
Jan 2018206.980.21%
Feb 2018199.36-3.68%
Mar 2018190.20-4.60%
Apr 2018193.681.83%
May 2018206.806.77%
Jun 2018231.3511.87%
Jul 2018225.92-2.35%
Aug 2018245.248.55%
Sep 2018258.515.41%
Oct 2018239.34-7.42%
Nov 2018221.10-7.62%
Dec 2018227.522.90%
Jan 2019228.050.23%
Feb 2019233.292.30%
Mar 2019238.882.40%
Apr 2019231.51-3.09%
May 2019225.04-2.79%
Jun 2019214.35-4.75%
Jul 2019198.88-7.22%
Aug 2019185.71-6.62%
Sep 2019174.60-5.98%
Oct 2019181.523.96%
Nov 2019180.72-0.44%
Dec 2019174.84-3.25%
Jan 2020180.813.41%
Feb 2020183.361.41%
Mar 2020176.93-3.51%
Apr 2020172.41-2.55%
May 2020163.11-5.39%
Jun 2020156.91-3.80%
Jul 2020150.19-4.28%
Aug 2020137.87-8.20%
Sep 2020121.25-12.05%
Oct 2020153.5626.65%
Nov 2020157.352.46%
Dec 2020157.680.21%
Jan 2021166.855.81%
Feb 2021181.248.63%
Mar 2021183.201.08%
Apr 2021176.34-3.74%
May 2021177.130.45%
Jun 2021186.255.15%
Jul 2021190.782.43%
Aug 2021180.61-5.33%
Sep 2021176.73-2.15%
Oct 2021182.183.09%
Nov 2021185.171.64%
Dec 2021189.592.39%
Jan 2022189.730.07%
Feb 2022188.07-0.87%
Mar 2022186.26-0.97%
Apr 2022186.860.32%
May 2022194.534.10%
Jun 2022197.831.70%
Jul 2022194.85-1.51%
Aug 2022187.85-3.59%
Sep 2022186.94-0.49%
Oct 2022182.12-2.58%
Nov 2022179.34-1.53%
Dec 2022183.832.51%
Jan 2023197.337.35%
Feb 2023213.308.09%
Mar 2023205.93-3.45%
Apr 2023197.51-4.09%
May 2023199.891.20%
Jun 2023184.56-7.67%
Jul 2023179.94-2.50%
Aug 2023174.93-2.78%
Sep 2023172.32-1.49%
Oct 2023170.22-1.22%
Nov 2023172.211.17%
Dec 2023183.996.84%
Jan 2024182.36-0.88%
Feb 2024175.03-4.02%
Mar 2024176.160.65%
Apr 2024174.79-0.78%
May 2024170.94-2.20%
Jun 2024174.131.87%
Jul 2024166.78-4.22%
Aug 2024164.74-1.22%
Sep 2024160.37-2.66%
Oct 2024164.512.58%
Nov 2024164.38-0.08%
Dec 2024163.39-0.60%
Jan 2025171.374.89%
Feb 2025172.770.81%
Mar 2025177.993.03%
Apr 2025183.383.03%
May 2025178.35-2.75%
Jun 2025175.88-1.38%

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

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