No don't think you hate breeding or you wouldnt have bought a mare
Yes their probably is other stallion's for the mare but i suppose they wan't to breed to the best they can afford.
Not all breeder's are loaded from the money they make from horse's a majority are actually battler's and i'm one of them. What some forget is to have a close look at their mare's and price the foal's they want to sell accordingly as a lot don't do that they put on telephone number price's then wonder why they can't sell If they went to a sire that was cheaper they may well make a higher percentage of profit on their initial outlay.
Have whoever you want on but don't ever have yourself on
Smithy you are living in dream land.
if you use a 5K stallion, you need to get 15000 at the sales just to break even!
Now go look at the sales, and see how many horses made money for their breeder.
Ill give you a scary fact - between 75-80% of foals sold at the most recent sales, LOST money for their breeder.
Aussie breno i dont think you actually understand the purpose behind the panel being put together in the first place. it has nothing to do with increasing sale prices for commercial breeders. 93% of foals bred are bred to be raced by their owner/breeder. They are hobbyists. The problem we have is that a huge number of hobby breeders are no longer breeding. We NEED them to stay in the game
You are forgiven aussiebreno
Peoples hobbies are the first in line to cease when a strain on finances comes around.
All the great stallions that we now have in Australia are still over priced for the market place?)/(&%$"· haha is that new to anyone?
Lessened expense (of the credits) means breeders SHOULD use the benefit of going to a better stallion (if aim is to breed to sell) and sale price will increase for that breeder.
Making an import of $5000 will draw down the number of imports (or didnt the scheme think of this). Because the imports (which someone said is only 600 a year which is a SMALL number in terms of total foals per year) are higher to purchase I believe the scheme also wanted the effect that those owners buying imports will take their cash to the yearling sales. More buyers drives up sale price. But as I've said earlier they are two different markets and the demand isn't paralel.
For the breed to race; see Mango's post #81 in the thread.
You say 93% of foals are bred to race. Why aren't people breeding to race then? Maybe the rewards are not there. Prizemoney needs to increase. A $5000 import fee is not going to increase prizemoney. Breeding credits probably will increase the number of foals born; but the funding of it is a joke. Don't breeders get 5% stakemoney? How about they rush that off to the bank and save it for when they want to breed. Or make it an increased figure to say 7.5%.
It looks like you have all the solutions.
Increase prizemoney you say. Well , that's a novel idea. I doubt anyone thought of that one before.
Now, why dont you tell us how we increase prizemoney....
Somewhere in this thread it was mentioned that studs should be contributing more. Well therein lies a very big part of the problem. Of the $16M odd dollars spent on service fees each year, a HUGE proportion is simply going back to the US stallion owners. As things stand, the Aust studs are not making a whole lot of money as many of the deals to get the top class stallions were done on significantly unfavourable terms.
I don't believe there needs to be a solution. Individual breeders need to increase their product, or as a collective the breeding industry needs to accept its shrinking because at the moment buyer pattern shows it is overpopulated. There is no problem that needs fixing.
And now we just go in a circle. You will come saying but foal numbers are down, race field are going down. Well if they go down I will go around the circle again and say that less fields mean more chance of winning meaning people will buy horses in search of that win; which will again naturally increase the breeding industry.
Breeders need to realise the demand is not there and live with it. Not steal from somewhere else.