Predictably Painful Market Opens New Cycle

These, as we all recognize, are unprecedented times. Only the foolhardy would forecast the duration, or future direction, of the tempest we suddenly find ourselves trying to navigate. Even so, one thing seems nearly guaranteed. There are people out there, whose most critical resources are not merely financial but sooner measured in intrepidity and acuity, who will turn out to have sown a great harvest during these times of famine.

Because that’s the other side of the same coin that made the current crisis as inevitable as it was impossible to foresee. As a system theoretically predicated on something that is simply impossible–perennial growth–capitalism relies, in practice, on cycles of growth and recession. Even these may not be very sustainable, if repeatedly taking the extreme form of “boom” and “bust.” But if society as a whole cannot easily absorb so bumpy a ride, the great individual fortunes will often be made by riding (along with Shakespeare’s Brutus) that “tide in the affairs of men which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune.”

The trick, as after the financial crisis of 2008, will be catching that tide. For the moment, some degree of trauma seems inevitable for a market that ultimately trades–among end-users, at least–in luxury goods.

Setting aside the March Sale in the same ring, a surreal episode even as the pandemic took hold, the postponed 2-Year-Old Spring Sale at OBS last week was the first real measure of the initial shock. Here was an auction that had registered records in gross, average and median for three years running and now faced an onrushing train (containing no overseas passengers, obviously).

Year-on-year comparison, in the accompanying table, is of limited value because of the accommodation this time of a small but valuable group of refugees from Fasig-Tipton’s cancelled sale at Gulfstream. These realized eight of the sale’s top 10 prices.

Taking these and other supplementary entries out of the equation, the core catalog naturally suffered rather deeper losses than those registered on the surface. The gross for the whole sale shrank by 19.8% and the average by 14.4%. Without the Gulfstream transfusion, however, the core market would have shed around one-third of its 2019 value; and the average would have been down by around a quarter.

Some, no doubt, would settle for even so severe a bump in the road, compared with the kind of abyss that has been opening up in the industry’s collective imagination. Regardless, the fact is that even the core of last week’s catalog can’t be sensibly compared with the equivalent sale in 2019.

Across all North American juvenile auctions last year, 30.2% of the animals catalogued were scratched; last week, 40.8% failed to make the ring. While vetting was presumably at a higher premium than ever, the principal driver for this jump in defections was surely the number of private sales preceding the sale. Pragmatic consignors had been receiving scouting missions from trusted clientele all spring. And while private deals doubtless accounted for the very numerous no-shows in the supplementary catalog, they may also have contributed to loss of impetus in the core market. (Certain elite stallions were conspicuously reduced in their representation through the sale.)

Remember, also, that the earlier auctions usually leave vendors the option of regrouping at Timonium. This time, of course, there was no such safety net. Though itself postponed, the Fasig-Tipton Midatlantic Sale is only days away.

If anyone is equal to tough decisions on a horse’s value, it’s the guys who present a 2-year-old for sale. They know that 10 seconds of theater can sometimes be too unforgiving a window to demonstrate the true potential of a horse. Often, if retaining sufficient faith and nerve, they will cling to the wreckage and find partners to prove a higher value on the track. This time round, however, many surely felt obliged to write off a project altogether. Despite the depressed values, the clearance rate held up at 80.1%, virtually identical to last year.

Nor, as such, would a juvenile auction necessarily be the most reliable litmus test for the wider market. These represent the end of a cycle, already comprising serial visits to the ring: as a yearling, weanling, even in utero. Throughout that process, values depend heavily on the confidence of pinhookers. The industry’s morale, to that extent, is nearly self-fulfilling.

But the cost of the raw materials has been rising steeply in recent years. So yes, the North American juvenile market last year passed $200 million for the first time ever, with the average transaction up 8.5%. But the typical yearling, the previous fall, had cost pinhookers nearly 30% more than had been the case only two years before.

Now, in contrast, we may have the kind of environment in which fresh cycles of investment can begin. If you’re a talented young pinhooker, you probably won’t need quite such a head for heights to test the water now.

In the end, last week’s sale was a nettle that had to be grasped by a few unlucky vendors and consignors on behalf of the whole industry. If the usual complaints about polarisation were shriller than ever, then that’s hardly surprising. If anything, the fact that there was still competition for the better horses is more important than a predictable expansion of no-man’s-land.

In 2009, the average at this sale shed 15%. But since the tremors on Wall Street were already being felt the previous year, it may be more pertinent to record that the average between the 2007 and 2009 sales slumped by 23.5%. Conceivably this crisis, being more abrupt, may have compressed its impact in corresponding fashion.

Either way, it will doubtless feel like a long way home. Looking back to 2008, the worry is that the bloodstock market–though greatly favored by all those cash steroids injected into the economy–took much longer to filter the benefits than did mainstream indices. The Dow Jones lost 33.8% in 2008, but recovered 18.8% the following year and maintained solid gains annually until 2015. The United States GDP, similarly, haemorrhaged 2.5% in 2009 but rebounded 2.6%in 2010 and maintained a decade of growth. North American bloodstock, in contrast, lost 21.2% in 2008; 32.2% in 2009; and another 6.5%, even on those compound losses, in 2010. It was not until 2011 (up 18.2%) and 2013 (up a crazy 27.9%, and even then only in tandem with the biggest spike in the Dow Jones) that its own recession levelled out.

Whether our business will again ride the slipstream of recovery in this very different crisis remains to be seen. But let’s just give a moment’s attention, and due credit, to the dollars and cents banked by the big winner in whatever kind of market may be left to us.

It’s obviously an unlucky time to be launching a stallion. Having recently reiterated a personal regard for the horse, however, it was gratifying to see Not This Time consolidating his brisk start on the track–and a precocity that had not been widely anticipated, in a son of Giant’s Causeway–with a knockout sale. From 23 members of his debut crop catalogued, it was a rare distinction to get as many as 21 into the ring; staggering, to find a new home for all but one (a colt who got as far as $95,000 without reaching his reserve); and spectacular, to top two of the four sessions. As a $12,500 stallion, Not This Time baked a cake of rare consistency for a $205,400 average; and then applied the icing in the $1.35 million filly who led the whole sale.

At the best of times, of course, many a good horse will slip through the cracks. Browsing the returns, it looks as though a reluctant farewell must have been said to several youngsters that showed all due gusto under tack and still failed to gain traction. Equally, someone out there will have taken home a foundation mare, or maybe a game-changing stallion, for little money: a tide taken at the flood.

After all, we’re dealing with a guess laid upon a guess. Who can say how the global economy will look, even in a few months’ time? For now, it’s about laying duckboards across the mudflats and keeping as balanced as possible.

The last big shock to the system was caused by financial institutions squeezing its functionality to breaking point (i.e. precisely because of that pressure towards constant growth). The origins of this crisis, plainly, are more extraneous. But you could argue that the post-2008 recovery, and subsequent surge, in turn saw boundaries being pushed, whether in fiscal, political and regulatory terms.

Certainly the instruments used to stimulate growth were all about liquidity–nugatory interest rates, quantitative easing, etc.–and much medication was still being prescribed long after the patient came out of intensive care. That was always going to leave governments short of options, in the event of a relapse. So it remains to be seen how they get back on an even keel, after suddenly being forced into lavish paternalist interventions to stem the catastrophe of a global economic shutdown.

What we do know, in our business, is that the post-2008 therapies were especially congenial for the affluent and that some of them played up their winnings in our business. Then they landed a bunch of tax breaks. The bull run continued breathlessly. It seemed like it would go on forever. After each record-breaking sale, it felt like a moral duty to remind everyone what happened to the “unsinkable” ship. But you might as well go round the Churchill infield on Derby day with a sandwich board, urging repentance, for the end is nigh.

By the same logic, however, it is an equal imperative now to urge everyone not to panic; to keep the faith; to know that the value now available in the marketplace will someday generate the next boom.

As we’ve noted, last week’s market was really centred on the current appetite for a racehorse. We’ll have a better idea of what lies ahead when the pinhookers show what they have left–whether literally, in their coffers, or simply in terms of confidence–at the yearling and weanling sales.

Meanwhile here’s something for them all to ponder. Because one of the problems of the bull run was that it inverted the whole premise of commercial breeding. It made the sales ring, not the racetrack, the key to far too many matings. If it takes a market crash to correct that, well, for the long-term sake of the breed, that might even be a price worth paying.

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Sole Volante To Wheel Back In 10 Days For Belmont Stakes

Following a strong performance in an allowance race last Wednesday at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla., Sole Volante will run back in just 10 days to start in the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes, reports the Daily Racing Form. To be run this Saturday at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y., the Belmont will be the first leg of the 2020 Triple Crown due to sweeping schedule changes caused by the worldwide coronavirus pandemic.

Sole Volante, a 3-year-old son of Karakontie trained by Patrick Biancone, won the Grade 3 Sam F. Davis Stakes back in February before finishing second to King Guillermo in the G2 Tampa Bay Derby. The late-running colt is owned by Reeves Thoroughbred Racing and Andie Biancone.

Wednesday's allowance race saw Sole Volante fall back to the rear of the field, as much as 10 lengths off the pace, then close around the outside with a sustained bid and cross the wire a comfortable 3/4-length winner.

“His energy level is very high, very good,” Biancone said. “We gave him a prep for the Belmont, and he came out of it the way I was expecting. The only way you cannot win a race is if you don't run.”

Sole Volante will ship to New York on a Tuesday flight out of South Florida.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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‘Very Competitive’: Two Highest-Earning Minnesota-Breds Meet Again In Wednesday’s 10,000 Lakes

The two Minnesota-bred Thoroughbreds with the highest career earnings, Mr. Jagermeister and Hot Shot Kid, will face off in the 10,000 Lakes Stakes Wednesday at Canterbury Park, racing six furlongs for a purse of $50,000. The 5-year-old Mr. Jagermeister, winner of 11 of 23 starts and $578,627 in purses, and 6-year-old Hot Shot Kid, who won five stakes, including the 10,000 Lakes, at the Shakopee, Minn. racetrack in 2019 and has amassed $545,404 in purses from 29 career starts, meet for the first time since the 2018 running of this same stake race.

That year Mr. Jagermeister got the best of it finishing 8 1/2 lengths in front of second-place Hot Shot Kid. He then went on to win three additional stakes that summer before being named the Canterbury horse of the meet, an honor bestowed on Hot Shot Kid last year.

“This is going to be a very exciting race; a very competitive race,” Mr. Jagermeister's trainer and co-owner Valorie Lund said. Leandro Goncalves has the mount. “[Mr. Jagermeister] is ready,” Lund said, but questions the prohibitively favored 2 to 5 morning line hung on her horse. “I've watched Hot Shot Kid training both here and at Oaklawn. He looks great,” she said.

Mac Robertson, perennial leading trainer at Canterbury Park and conditioner of Hot Shot Kid, is also quick to acknowledge the competition.

“Mr. Jagermeister is very good,” Robertson said, speaking Sunday from Delaware Park where he is preparing his East Coast string. He intended to run Hot Shot Kid at Keeneland but when that meet was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, he changed plans and entered at Oaklawn where Hot Shot Kid ran a distant tenth in a sprint. Robertson has named last year's leading jockey Francisco Arietta to ride. He also entered Cinco Star in the five-horse field.

The 10,000 Lakes is the second race on an 11-race program that begins at 4:30 p.m., while the co-featured $50,000 Lady Slipper Stakes is the sixth. Robertson and Lund are also represented in the Lady Slipper. Robertson will run 7-year-old Honey's Sox Appeal and Ready to Runaway. Lund has entered Firstmate, a 5-year-old mare previously trained by Joe Sharp, for owners Barry and Joni Butzow of Eden Prairie, Minn. They must beat Lady Slipper defending champion Ari Gia and trainer Jose Silva, Jr.

“I'm tickled to have her,” Lund said of Firstmate. “There is a ton of speed in the race. I like the outside [post position] draw.” Firstmate recorded the fastest four furlong workout of the morning on June 10 in preparation. “She did it so easy,” Lund said.

Robertson has a very strong hand in the Lady Slipper. “I wouldn't trade my two for any of them,” he said. Honey's Sox Appeal is a multiple stakes winner who Robertson said “was in a brutally tough race at Oaklawn and she didn't run that bad.”

Ready to Runaway, claimed for $25,000, subsequently won three consecutive stakes last year at Canterbury. She raced three times at Oaklawn this spring with two third-place and one second-place finish, earning speed figures better than last year.

“She's never run a bad race really,” Robertson said. Not one to be without a plan, he considered potential strategy for Wednesday while examining the field. “We'll probably send one and take one back. This is a really good race.” He also entered Clickbait, but she will be a scratch and is reentered for Thursday. The field includes 2017 Minnesota Oaks winner Double Bee Sting and Pinup Girl, winner of the 2018 Lady Slipper.

Racing resumes Tuesday and runs through Thursday with first post at 4:30 p.m. each afternoon. More information is available at www.canterburypark.com .

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Monmouth To Honor Leonard Green With Virgil ‘Buddy’ Raines Distinguished Achievement Award

Long-time owner, breeder and racing consultant Leonard Green, whose D.J. Stable has been a fixture at Monmouth Park for nearly four decades, has been named the recipient of the Virgil “Buddy” Raines Distinguished Achievement Award, the track announced Monday.

The Raines Award, celebrating its 25th year, is traditionally presented during Monmouth Park's opening day press conference. With an altered schedule due to the Covid-19 pandemic, Monmouth Park's 75th season will now get underway on Friday, July 3.

Green joins a notable list of past recipients whose exemplary conduct has earned them the reward for their professionalism, integrity and service to Thoroughbred racing.

“Monmouth Park has always been home to me. It represents one of the finest racing establishments in the country,” Green said. “I am deeply honored to be recognized for this distinguished award and am proud to be a member of its impressive roster of recipients. I personally want to thank Dennis Drazin for this award, and for all his hard work in keeping horse racing viable in New Jersey.”

Drazin, chairman and CEO of Darby Development, operator of Monmouth Park, said Green “exemplifies everything that is good about Thoroughbred racing.”

“The Raines Award honors the very best in our sport and Leonard Green has represented that for many years now,” Drazin added.

Leonard and Lois Green co-own D.J. Stable, which was Monmouth Park's leading owner three times. D.J. Stable has won almost 500 races at the “Oceanport Oval,” ranging from claiming races to Graded Stakes. Over the years the Greens have campaigned almost 30 graded stakes winners, including 2018 Eclipse Award-winner Jaywalk, A Thread of Blue, Another Miracle, Diamond King, Do It With Style, Mo' Green, Shooter, Songandaprayer and Sower.

The Greens have also bred the graded stakes-winning Central Banker, Hoppertunity, November Snow and Senate Appointee among dozens of other notable stakes winners.

“We have been fortunate to win races at tracks around the world, but standing in the winner's circle at Monmouth Park is still my greatest thrill,” Green said. “Of course we could not have won all those races at Monmouth without the assistance of talented trainers like Walter Reese, John Servis, Joe Orseno and Gary Contessa and Hall of Fame jockeys Julie Krone, Craig Perret, Chris Antley and Joe Bravo. They all should be recognized for their respective efforts as well.”

Green, a New Jersey Certified Public Accountant, is a graduate of the Harvard Business School Owner/President Management Program. He holds a master's degree in Taxation, with Honors, from New York University and an undergraduate degree in Accounting from Rutgers University. For almost 20 years, Green has taught Entrepreneurship and Family Business courses at Babson College.

Green is also Founder and Chairman of New Jersey-based accounting and advisory firm “The Green Group.” The firm specializes in the thoroughbred industry and has over 700 equine-related clients, including many of the top-rated partnerships and syndications, as well as alliances with fellow owners and breeders, trainers and jockeys.

Green has also been featured on CNBC “Business to Business” for stories focusing on making money in the horse breeding and racing industries and is a regular columnist for the Thoroughbred Daily News.

In 2017 Green released a top selling business book, The Entrepreneur's Playbook.

Monmouth Park's 37-day meet will again be highlighted by the Grade 1 TVG.com Haskell Stakes, which will be renewed for the 53rd time on Saturday, July 18. In a first for the Haskell, the top four finishers will earn points (100-40-20-10) for the Kentucky Derby, which is set for Sept. 5.

Five other stakes will be contested on Haskell Day, including the Grade 1 United Nations, the Grade 3 Monmouth Cup, the Grade 3 Molly Pitcher and the Grade 3 WinStar Matchmaker Stakes.

The racing schedule will go from Friday, July 3, through Sunday, Sept. 27. Post time on Fridays will be 5 p.m. (except Sept. 4 when it will be 12:50 p.m.). Saturday and Sunday post will be 12:50, except Haskell Day when the first race goes at noon.

For more information visit www.monmouthpark.com or follow the racetrack on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

The list of previous Raines Award winners:

1996: J. Willard Thompson

1997: Danny Perlsweig

1998: Warren A. “Jimmy” Croll

1999: Joe Pierce Jr.

2000: Peter Shannon

2001: Dennis Drazin

2002: Sam Fieramosca

2003: Charles and Marianne Hesse

2004: Janet Laszlo

2005: Richard Malouf

2006: John Forbes

2007: Ben Perkins Sr.

2008: Gerald and Carolyn Sleeter

2009: Joel Kligman

2010: John Tammaro III

2011: Frank Costa

2012: John Mazza

2013: Ebby Novak

2014: Chuck Spina

2015: Bob Baffert

2016: Ed Barney

2017: Bob Kulina

2018: Mike Musto

2019: Tim Hills

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