Monday, April 26, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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The ebb and flow of the cotton market turned decidedly in the direction of the bulls last week, with several indicators helping prices advance. Cotton broke out of its horizontal trading range established over the last two months, primarily driven higher by a surprise announcement here that India would suspend registrations and exports of cotton for the time being, effective immediately. Responding to the steep increase in local cotton prices, India’s Office of the Textile Commissioner took this unusual move in order to boost domestic supplies and presumably temper the recent gains in local prices. Ironically, this action is likely to deplete already-short stocks of exportable supplies in the rest of the world, driving global prices higher. In response, Nearby prices on the ICE Futures U.S. exchange gapped higher on the news, surging 619 points on the week to close Friday at 86.20 cents per pound, the highest weekly close in fourteen years. Similarly, the Cotlook ‘A’ Index, a proxy for global prices, soared in step to 91.30 last week, the highest level also since the mid-1990s, reflecting higher prices worldwide for cotton.

Also bullish for price was news of a spurt in weekly exports of U.S. cotton here. Shipments climbed past 350,000 bales for the first time this marketing year, reflecting strong growth to a number of key markets. In particular, cotton destined for Chinese and Bangladeshi mills rose to the highest volume so far this marketing year. With rumors circulating that China is set to increase its tariff rate quota again soon coupled with news that India likely will not be nearly as large a competitor in coming weeks, U.S. cotton stands a strong chance of surging to China in the remainder of this marketing year. Also, forecasts for record mill demand and imports of cotton in Bangladesh suggest U.S. cotton may fare well this year as well. On balance, we look for U.S. cotton exports to follow their normal seasonal trend of accelerating in the remaining weeks of the marketing year, with mounting evidence suggesting shipments in 2009/10 could exceed the latest USDA forecast of 12.0 million bales as we first suggested here.

Although market fundamentals point to higher cotton prices, last week’s spurt may have driven the market into overbought territory—especially if the credit situation in Greece causes speculators to lighten up on risk. In the past four decades, there have only been five price moves above 90 cents per pound, and as cotton prices begin to approach this psychologically important level, the market may find willing sellers, as weak longs and commercial traders try to lock-in relatively high historic prices. The most recent Commitment of Traders report shows commercial traders increasing their net-short cotton position by nearly 11,500 contracts as of April 13th. This was before India’s announced export ban, as well as before prices moved above the consolidation range established over the last two months. Next week’s report will be interesting to see if commercials continued to sell into the rally, or if speculative accounts, mainly trend-following funds, were adding to their long positions on the chart breakout. One thing that appears evident is that cotton traders should have an interesting trading environment well into 2010, and that risk exposure for both producers and consumers is likely to be more pronounced than in recent memory.

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