Monday, May 10, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


for more analysis like this, please click here.

Cotton futures retreated for the second straight week last week, erasing all of April’s gains as outside influences drove the dollar higher, roiled equity markets, and pressured most commodities lower. Nearby cotton prices fell 342 points, or -4.1% on the week to 80.71 cents per pound, burdened primarily by a soaring dollar. Last week’s strength in the greenback is a bit of a misnomer, with the true issue being relatively more weakness in the euro from default fears emanating from Greece. The euro plunged to as low as $1.26 last week—a fourteen-month low—amid concern that Greece’s debt issues could lead to a much-worse contagion across Europe, crippling the tentative recovery on the continent. Naturally, this propelled the dollar higher, with the U.S. Dollar Index breaching 85.0, its highest level in over a year. Naturally, the dollar’s rise caused massive unwinding of long commodity trades, including cotton.

These jitters spilled over into equity markets, sending stocks on a wild roller coaster week of trading with commodity markets paying close heed. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed almost 800 points on the week—its biggest plunge in years—as investors unloaded risk amid this week's chaotic experience in the markets. Euro-zone debt issues coupled with Thursday’s unprecedented—if ‘accidental’—intraday U.S. stock market plunge of almost 1,000 points left investors in no mood for additional risk exposure in equities or commodities, with many flocking to the relatively safe havens of gold and the dollar.

This ‘flight to safety’ drove prices for many commodities lower, dragging cotton prices down in step. The nineteen-commodity Reuters/Jefferies CRB index plunged nearly 6%, the biggest weekly fall since 2008. All major components of the Index except livestock posted steep losses on the week, reflecting the broad-based risk aversion. Regardless of any internal fundamental drivers impacting the cotton market last week, cotton was swept up in the broader-market decline.

Looking ahead, the coming week holds the potential for a rebound for cotton. The market’s first peek at new-crop fundamentals from the USDA Tuesday is likely to suggest continued tightness in the balance sheet, if somewhat looser than this marketing year. Analysts’ forecasts—including our own here—point to a larger crop size in 2010/11, but an offsetting jump in demand for U.S. cotton as well. Also, anecdotal evidence indicates that last week’s swoon in prices prompted Chinese mills to become active buyers, suggesting robust export sales are forthcoming. And the weekend announcement of a Greek rescue package worth almost $1 trillion from the EU is likely to assuage fears of an imminent default, lifting spirits and easing risk aversion somewhat. This news could partially offset last week’s decline in the euro and prompt a modest rebound in commodities in coming days, including cotton.

No comments:

Post a Comment