Fasig-Tipton July’s Racing Age and Breeding Stock Catalogues Online

Fasig-Tipton has released its catalogues for the July Breeding Stock and July Selected Horses of Racing Age sales, with both available online at Fasig-Tipton. Both sales will be held Monday, July 12, in Lexington the day prior to Fasig-Tipton's July Sale of selected yearlings.

The July Breeding Stock auction will commence first, at 2 p.m. The sale includes the Far From Over/Fountain of Youth dispersal with 51 initial entries of broodmares, many with 2021 foals included, and broodmare prospects.

Immediately following the July Breeding Stock sale, Fasig-Tipton will begin the July Selected Horses of Racing Age sale with 163 initial entries. Since first established in 2013, the auction has produced nearly 100 stakes wins and more than $51 million in earnings by its graduates. The enhanced online catalogue offers pedigrees, race replays, statistical links, Ragozin “sheet” numbers, past performances, and more.

“We are very excited with how these initial catalogues have come together for July Breeding Stock and Selected Horses of Racing Age,” said Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning. “With these two auctions on July 12, followed by the July Sale of Selected Yearlings on July 13, we're offering buyers in every segment of the market a bonanza of mid-summer opportunities.”

Print catalogues will be available at Fasig-Tipton by July 9. Approved entries for both sales will be accepted up until sale time.

 

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Catalogs For Fasig-Tipton July Selected Horses Of Racing Age, July Breeding Stock Sales Now Online

Catalogs for Fasig-Tipton's July Breeding Stock and July Selected Horses of Racing Age sales may now be viewed online.

Both auctions will be held on Monday, July 12 in Lexington, Ky., and precede Fasig-Tipton's July Sale of selected yearlings to be conducted the following day on Tuesday, July 13.

The July 12 sale day will begin with July Breeding Stock at 2 p.m., which includes the Far From Over/Fountain of Youth dispersal. The catalog currently features 51 initial entries and is comprised of broodmares – many of which will be sold alongside their 2021 foals at foot – and broodmare prospects.  Covering sires represented are Catalina Cruiser, Catholic Boy, Connect, Country House, Dialed In, Echo Town, Far From Over, Goldencents, Gun Runner, higher Power, Honor Code, Lord Nelson, Maclean's Music, Midnight Storm, Mshawish, Mucho Macho Man, Omaha Beach, Sky Mesa, Tom's d'Etat, Vekoma, Vino Rosso, and Violence.

The catalog may be viewed here.

Once the July Breeding Stock sale has concluded, Fasig-Tipton will then immediately begin the July Selected Horses of Racing Age sale. The nation's leading source of horses of racing age, Fasig-Tipton has cataloged 163 initial entries for this year's sale.

Since first established in 2013, the auction has produced nearly 100 stakes wins, 27 percent stakes horses, and more than $51 million in earnings by its graduates. This year's catalog cover features the sale's most recent graded stakes winners in Fast Boat, winner of the 2021 Grade 2 Twin Spires Turf Sprint, and Fearless, winner of the 2021 G2 Gulfstream Park Mile Stakes. Also featured are 2020 graded stakes winners Biddy Duke, Cool Arrow, and Cross Border.

Entries may now be viewed via the sale's user-friendly enhanced online catalog, which offers pedigrees, race replays, statistical links, Ragozin “sheet” numbers, and continuously updated Daily Racing Form and Thoroughmanager past performances.

Prospective buyers may also sign up for email alerts by clicking here, or by texting FASIGHORA to 22828 to receive pedigree and race-record updates, as well as notifications of new sale entries.

“We are very excited with how these initial catalogs have come together for July Breeding Stock and Selected Horses of Racing Age,” said Fasig-Tipton president Boyd Browning. “With these two auctions on July 12, followed by the July Sale of Selected Yearlings on July 13, we're offering buyers in every segment of the market a bonanza of mid-summer opportunities.”

The July Breeding Stock and Selected Horses of Racing Age catalogs will also be available via the equineline sales catalogue app. Print catalogs will be available on the sales grounds by July 9.

Fasig-Tipton will continue to accept approved entries for both the July Breeding Stock and July Selected Horses of Racing Age sales up until sale time.

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Juvenile Market Completes $200-Million Bounceback

It may still turn out that we're living under a volcano. For now, however, the first major bloodstock cycle after the trauma of 2020 represents an almost symmetrical, V-shaped recovery–right back to the $200-million breakthrough made by the American 2-year-old market in 2019. Despite restocking with a diminished pool of horses, compared with then, this sector has resembled a giant stress ball in retrieving all its former buoyancy the moment the squeeze was released.

It was the juvenile consignors, of course, that were first broadsided by the pandemic last year. Somehow they got through OBS March, though an air-raid siren might as well have welcomed every horse into the ring, before a dazing series of cancellations or postponements. From the catalogs that were salvaged, the ratio of scratchings approached two-in-five as alternative solutions were improvised with trusted clients, from private sales to racing partnerships. Those that persevered into the ring did so very much with a “fire sale” mentality: cut your losses, get your jabs, start over. The final reckoning, at public auction, obviously didn't represent the full picture but offered a vivid measure of the pain: aggregate turnover collapsed by 38% from $203,206,700 to $125,956,800 and average transactions by 24.4% from $95,807 to $72,388.

A $200-million juvenile market in 2019, remember, had represented a fresh landmark in a breathless bull run for the whole bloodstock industry. Some of us then responded with wiseguy finger-wagging: since perennial growth had historically proved impossible, capitalism instead depended on cyclical correction of overheated markets. But just as nobody could have predicted this particular needle, nor could anyone confidently assert that a new balloon might be inflated virtually overnight.

But that is just what has happened. With obliging neatness, the 2021 2-year-old market–rounded off at Santa Anita last week–has rebounded 59.4% on last year's crash landing, to $200,782,050. The average, similarly, recovered by 28.2% to $92,826. Removing the freak 2020 market from comparisons yields a remarkably solid match-up with the giddy trade of 2019, turnover falling short by just 1.2% and average by 3.1%.

Unsurprisingly, consignment was somewhat leaner this time round. Pinhookers had tightened their belts, while yearling vendors were no doubt less ambitious with their reserves (being less inclined simply to retain a horse and try again next spring). Nor should we forget an ongoing decline in the available pool, the North American foal crop having subsided from 35,000 to around 20,000 since the previous economic shock of 2008. That narrower base has improved the solidity of this market. The RNA rate at juvenile sales in 2007 was around one-in-three, and has in recent years consistently been one-in-four or better.

Indeed, the clearance rate is the more spectacular of all the indices of recovery in 2021, with no fewer than 83% of animals into the ring finding a new home, up from 77.4% in the booming (and bigger) 2019 market. In other words, the symmetry of this 'V' rally can be pretty well ascribed to pure demand. And perhaps that's no surprise, given the forecasting consensus. Yes, the pandemic has been catastrophic for many businesses. On the other hand, those whose affluence is unimpaired find themselves straining with pent-up spending capacity.

For around a decade, leading up to the pandemic, the entire international bloodstock market had been nourished by the fiscal response to the 2008 crisis, with quantitative easing and marginal interest rates fostering liquidity. Then came the tax breaks lavished upon the wealthiest during the last presidency. Throw into the mix a universal suppression of indulgence over the past 15 months–everyone, after all, has been freshly reminded that life is for living–and you have a perfect recipe for a renewal of demand for luxury goods. (And that, as we who view them as a vehicle of subsistence are apt to forget, is precisely what the Thoroughbred racehorse is.)

Some commentators on the wider economy admittedly consider this too fragile a foundation for sustainable recovery. Their fear is that the distribution of wealth, which has not been so unbalanced for a century, leaves too many people unable to contribute to the consumption that drives the economy. If that is so, the stakes are plainly high for the various stimulus programs.

Indeed, those instead predicting a 'K'-shaped recovery see many of the ingredients that fed the Great Depression back in place, with spending power only able to meet production capacity by personal debt. Marriner S. Eccles, chairman of the Federal Reserve under Roosevelt, famously compared the Depression to “a poker game where the chips were concentrated in fewer and fewer hands, [and] other fellows could only stay in the game by borrowing… When their credit ran out, the game stopped.”

So while the resilience of this particular market is a massive relief for many professional horsemen, making a modest living by their skill and sheer hard work, you can bet that some analysts are lining it alongside prices for art and sportscars and sensing trouble ahead.

Be that as it may, for now we can be extremely grateful for such an enthusiastic resumption of investment in our industry. As a result, many a humble household is back on its feet. The juvenile sector, after all, is perhaps the one that trims its sails most bravely into the weather. It tries to eke out extra value from an adolescent Thoroughbred that may already have been through the ring twice, as weanling and yearling–with no backstop, no Plan B. A very strong yearling market, moreover, simply elevates the base costs and places a daunting premium on firing a “bullet” at the under-tack show.

So we're looking at horsemen of unusual flair and endurance. Volatility is embedded in their program. We all read the “home run” headlines, but each of those must repair the damage made by the duds. A market that fluctuates so wildly, then, only adds to a routine precariousness.

Let's take a snapshot of the middle market, where so many pinhookers operate, via the median at Keeneland September–and compare that with the average juvenile dividend.

 

Obviously we're not comparing like with like, but we can see that even at the best of times consignors find themselves either stranded on the beach or catching a rising tide, with very little middle ground. The pinhooker who had operated in the middle market at Keeneland in 2019, with a $47,000 median, last spring sold into a market averaging $72,388. That didn't leave a lot to work with, once the intervening bills had all been paid.

Conversely, they could restock much less expensively–the Keeneland median down to $37,000–and this time round a $92,286 average will have allowed many to patch up some of the holes in the roof.

But they're a hardy crew, for sure. Albeit this is a fairly eccentric gauge of their work, in percentage terms the 2019-2020 cycle, brutal as it was, was little different from those of 2013-14 and 2015-16. What a way to make a living!

As for those stallions who best served their cause, I always consider the table of juvenile averages misleading. Many stallions are represented by so small a sample at the 2-year-old auctions that a single knockout price can conceal a multitude of deficiencies; while often even the highest averages fail to match the same crop's performance at the yearling sales. Let's take a look at the top 20 sires (minimum four 2-year-olds sold) by average–but let's also compare those yields with their averages/medians with the same crop at the yearling sales.

We see that even class leader Quality Road, with a $1.5-million colt to boost his average, actually had an unchanged median. Runner-up Uncle Mo, similarly aided by a $1.3-million sale, made a presentable advance by average but his median was down by half. And third-placed Nyquist, who made impressive gains by average, made only a modest advance with his median.

In fairness, the remarks about a small sample cut both ways. The median, from so limited a group, is perhaps not that instructive. Nonetheless hats off to Flatter, Liam's Map, Maclean's Music, Twirling Candy and Frosted for doubling (or better) their medians in passing stock through 2-year-old consignors. Practical Joke's fine debut in this sector is also clearly legible, whether by average or median. But one or two of the bigger hitters missed their mark this time, for once even champ Into Mischief. His rise had been very well measured by this sector, but in 2021 he rehoused only 21 of 35 juveniles, with his average and median both receding. A rare blip, and if a whole market can bounce back from one dull year, so can the stallion of the decade.

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Tiznow Filly Tops Fasig-Tipton Santa Anita 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale

The second edition of the Fasig-Tipton Santa Anita 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale was held Wednesday afternoon in the winner's circle at Santa Anita Park. The sale saw increases in average and median over 2019's inaugural sale, and a decrease in the buyback rate.

A filly by Horse of the Year Tiznow topped the sale when sold to Spendthrift Farm for $250,000 (video). Pike Racing, agent offered the bay filly as Hip 36.

Out of the Empire Maker mare Soot Z, the filly is a half-sister to eye-catching Grade 2 winner Amalfi Sunrise (Constitution). Hip 36 is also a half-sister to group stakes placed winner Gotti (More Than Ready) and stakes placed winner Senatus (Sky Mesa). The filly worked an eighth in 10.3 during Monday's under tack show (video).

The sale's top colt came in the form of Bochombo (Street Boss), purchased by Peter Miller, agent for $150,000 (video).

The dark bay of brown colt was offered as Hip 20 by Havens Bloodstock Agency, agent. Bochombo broke his maiden at Santa Anita on May 23 in his second start (video), then ran second in Sunday's Fasig-Tipton Futurity. The colt is one of five winners from seven starters and the second stakes horse out of the unraced Storm Cat mare Parading Lady, herself a daughter of champion Sacahuista and a half-sister to multiple group stakes winner Ekraar.

In total, 53 2-year-olds changed hands for $2,981,000. The average was $56,245, up from $54,630 in 2019. The median jumped 40 percent to $50,000 from $30,000 at the sale's inaugural edition, while the RNA rate fell 14 points to 22.1 percent. Eight juveniles sold for $100,000 or more.

Full results are available online.

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