By Ron Mitchell , September 8, 2018
There is a good reason pinhookers gravitate to the Keeneland September Yearling Sale.
For the most part, horses bought out of the marathon auction have proven profitable for those adventurous speculators buying yearlings to resell as 2-year-olds in training.
According to figures compiled by BloodHorse MarketWatch, the 485 yearlings purchased at Keeneland’s sale last year who were resold as juveniles this year nearly doubled their initial price. As a group, the Keeneland yearlings were bought for an aggregate $33,314,400, for an average price of $68,689 and a $50,000 median. When those same horses were sold as 2-year-olds, they grossed $64,336,287, a gain of 93.1%, not taking into account expenses from the time of purchase until resell. The resale average was $132,652, with a median of $70,000.
“This is where it happens,” said Wavertree Stables’ Ciaran Dunne as he inspected horses at Keeneland on a humid, overcast morning Sept. 8, two days prior to the start of the auction. “The meat and potatoes of what we do is Keeneland September. With the other (yearling) sales, you fill in around the edges.”
Dunne, who shops all the major yearling sales in search of horses on behalf of his partnership groups, said the critical mass of so many horses on offer—4,538 are cataloged for this year’s Sept. 10-23 auction (with a dark day Sept. 14)—provides diversity in all price and quality ranges.
“The beauty of Keeneland September is that with so many horses, (buyers) get spread around, so you have more opportunities, as opposed to boutique sales where people don’t miss any,” said Dunne, who like other pinhookers is always looking for value. “That (boutique sales concept) obviously doesn’t work for us when we’re trying to sneak in here and slide one out. In those smaller sales, you don’t have that opportunity.”
While the vast number of horses cataloged at Keeneland can appear daunting, Dunne said it actually plays into the hands of pinhookers who have a proven system.
“We have been in business for 20 years, and if we hadn’t done well at Keeneland September, we wouldn’t have been in business that long.”
The under tack show for the Ocala Breeders’ Sales Co.’s 2-year-olds in training and horses of racing age sale continued with seven horses sharing the fastest time of the day of :10 for an eighth of a mile and three going a quarter mile in :21 1/5. For full story click here.
Trainer Linda Rice went to $440,000 to acquire a Speightstown filly from the Wavertree Stables consignment during the April 20 second day of the Ocala Breeders’ Sales Co.’s April sale of 2-year-olds in training.. For full story click here.
By Tracy Gantz,
A son of first-crop sire The Factor, who previewed with a furlong work in :09 4/5, brought $460,000 to top the Barretts select 2-year-old sale at Del Mar March 30. For full article click here
FTFMAR: 2-year-old colt, Hip #56 On a Roll, by A.P. Indy $1,000,000
Breeder: G Watts Humphrey Jr, Susan Keller, Victoria Oliver & G W Humphrey III (KY)
Consignor: Wavertree Stables Inc (Ciaran Dunne), agent
Buyer: Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa al Maktoum
Hip 56, a Wavertree Stables’-consigned son of two-time Horse of the Year Curlin, became the second horse to cross the seven-figure threshold at Wednesday’s Fasig-Tipton Florida Sale at Gulfstream Park, selling to xx for…
[To read this entire TDN Sale Result, click here.]