Orb Colt Tops Fasig-Tipton Second Session

Image: 
Description: 

Photo: Anne M. Eberhardt
Orb colt sold for $300,000.

Topped by an Orb   colt from the family of champion Songbird, the second session of Fasig-Tipton’s October yearling sale Oct. 25 saw solid across-the-board trade, with downturns in average and median prices.

With 251 head selling for $7,162,700, the average price of $28,537 represented a 22% decline from the $36,688 average a year ago when 222 yearlings grossed $8,144,700. The $10,000 median Tuesday was down 37.5% from the second-session median of $16,000 in 2015.

One area of improvement was the RNA rate with 27% buy-backs, compared with a 29.2% rate last year.

Through two of three sessions, 497 horses have grossed $15,469,100, with a cumulative average of $31,125 and median of $12,000.

Despite the declines, Fasig-Tipton president and CEO Boyd Browning Jr. said the day’s trade had a good vibe and there was a general consensus the day’s offerings were the lightest at the upper end among the three sessions, a consequence of how the catalog—organized alphabetically by mare name—fell.

“All in all I thought trade was pretty consistent and very similar today to yesterday (Day 1) and there are some nice horses tomorrow,” Browning said, noting that sales have an ebb and flow that can affect the overall figures. “Every sale is different and it depends on who might show up one day and leave the next day or come for just one day. In horse sales there are wide variations from day to day.

“It’s a reasonable market and it’s a fair market.”

Browning said he believed the lower buy-back rate is important to breeders and consignors.

“Virtually every sales company would tell you at the end of the day they want to get horses sold,” Browning said. “The people who are transacting business with you are wanting to turn their product into cash. Getting the horses sold—maybe not be for as much as they want or hoped for—but they no longer are going to feed or take care of those horses and are waiting for a check that is going to come from us in 30 days.

“I would always lean toward trying to improve the buy-back rate.”

Topping the session at $300,000 was Hip 759, from the first crop of Claiborne Farm stallion Orb and out of the unraced Medaglia d'Oro   mare Zealous Gold. Consigned by Taylor Made Sales Agency, the colt was bought by trainer Tony Dutrow.

Bo Hunt signed the sales on behalf of Team D and Dutrow. Hunt said he was on the phone with Dutrow during the bidding and that was as high as he was likely to go.

“He was just very happy to get the horse bought,” Hunt said. "The Orbs that I've seen have been nice horses. I think he's been well represented at the sale and hopefully they go forward from there.

“I think it is very competitive on the top end,” Hunt said of the market. “That’s what people want.”

The colt’s second dam, stakes-placed Beaties for Real, is the dam of four stakes winners, including two grade III winners. Third dam Beaty Sark produced grade II winner Ivanavinalot, the dam of Songbird. He was bred in Kentucky by Fred W. Hertrich III and John D. Fielding.

Mark Taylor, sales director for Taylor Made Sales Agency, said the colt was targeted for the October sale rather than an August or September auction because he was a May 23 foal and would benefit from the extra time.

“Mother Nature does more to bring these horses along than anything we can do in prepping them,” Taylor said. “He was much more mature, filled out, and physically ready than he would have been a month ago.

“He kind of had the whole package, which is what is what it takes in this market. That was good for buyer and seller.”

Taylor said the better horses in Taylor Made’s consignment at the Fasig-Tipton sale had exceeded expectations.

“Our horses that have sold the best are bringing 50-100% more than I appraised them for,” Taylor said. “With the rest of them you have to be very careful.”

The day’s second-highest price of $290,000 was paid by Mike Ryan, agent for a client he declined to name, for a colt sired by WinStar stallion Gemologist  , the second-leading first crop sire.

Consigned by Four Star Sales, the colt bred in Kentucky by Graeme Lang is out of the winning Cape Town mare Starlicious. The colt’s second dam, stakes winner Chez Chez Chez, produced Really Crafty, a gelding whose 17 wins included the San Carlos Handicap.

"He's resembles his sire a lot,” Ryan said. “They're (Gemologist foals) well-grown horses that will stretch, but they've got plenty of pace. They showed it at the 2-year-old sales and they're showing it now at the racetrack, very impressive horses. It was no genius picking him out. He was just a really good colt and you have to pay for those kind. I knew we'd have to stretch for him. 

"I thought he was the best colt in today. In fact, he might be the best colt in the sale. We'll see in time. I think he's grade I-caliber."

The sale concludes Wednesday, with a 10 a.m. EDT session.