Rokeby Forever wrote:Why "OUCH"? He would have been another Mountain Cat from the esteemed collection of Storm Cat stiff stallions.
I believe I was crying in pain from the gatorade comment
Moderators: Roguelet, WaveMaster, madelyn
Rokeby Forever wrote:Sons constantly going to stud are what drives Unbridled's Song's fee - the potential for a yearling in the ring to one day go to stud is what makes his sons average $363,000. Buyers can look at stats just like anyone else and see that average runners earn $70,000 - - but they also see sons out there going to stud on a regular basis...and that's where the cash register lights go off in their heads...and why they're willing to to pay $363,000 for a son when they know he'll average $70,000 on the track. And, because the market will pay $363,000 average, Taylor Made can charge $200,000 for Unbridled Song's fee. If his sons stopped going to stud, his fee would suddenly drop like a lead balloon. That's the relationship.
Rokeby Forever wrote:So, let me understand your logic - people are plunking down $200,000 to breed a horse that, according to average, will earn $70,000
Was a horse like Buddha shuttled off to stud to stand for $50,000+ after only 4 starts because of breeding demand, or because he fell apart after the Wood Memorial? Did Rockport Harbor have any soundness issues, even before he ran in the Remsen? Was Eurosliver a viable TC candidate...and stopped on because of his breeding value before the KY Derby? Was Songandaprayer retired in the summer of his 3 year old campaign because he was an initial fee $50,000 stallion? Why did Value Plus disappear after the Carter Handicap (I believe it was)? It was only May...why not keep him in training and possibly point for the BC Sprint? Ouch...that last one made my ribs hurt!
Please tell me why I would pay a $200k stud fee so I MIGHT be one of the lucky 25 people to sell my weanling for maybe 5k more than the studfee? Please tell me why I should pay a $200k stud fee so I MIGHT be one of the 187 who got their stud fee back?
You really think someone is going look at those numbers and spend that kind money so someone ELSE can stud the horse to finally make money off it? And even if they did, Taylor Made shouldn't give a damn. Why should they? So long as 200 people line up to breed to UbS, I seriously doubt Taylor Made gives a damn what a 3rd or 4th party 5 years from now does with the foal
In the current market flooded with commercial breeders, sales figures and earnings are two totally different and virtually unrelated items. UbS will continue to get $200k/foal so long as people are willing to breed to him at that figure so they can SELL THE FOAL. It's about SALES FIGURES with him, not earnings. His stud fee will go down when people stop paying for his yearlings
brogers wrote:You can’t live off zero racetrack performance, especially at that level of service fee.
Rokeby Forever wrote:People will pay $1 Million for an UbS because they're thinking ahead - possibly knock off a Grade 1 and ship the son off to stud.
Rokeby Forever wrote:If UbS had only 3 sons at stud at this point, buyers would not be paying $363,000 average for his sons and he would not be getting $200,000 as a stud fee. Period.