Monday, May 17, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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Buffeted by less-than-favorable headwinds from outside markets, cotton prices were little changed on the week but still managed to fare better than most commodities, hinting at the underlying strong fundamentals internal to the cotton market that are likely to persist into the coming marketing year. Nearby cotton futures finished the week up a modest one point to 80.72 cents per pound from the week before, trading inside the prior week’s range. But this seemingly dull activity masks the impressive behind-the-scenes narrowing of the spread between July and December. After reaching a difference of 895 points hardly three weeks ago, the backwardation between these contracts stands at just 345 points now, as prices on both contracts have converged.

Cotton has taken its cues recently from both internal and external influences, particularly the re-strengthening of the dollar and the outlook for cotton fundamentals in the new marketing year. Naturally, many markets around the world are hanging on the latest developments emanating from the European debt crisis. The difficulties impacting Greece threaten to drag other euro-bloc members into the morass, weighing on investor and consumer confidence and lowering the value of the area’s currency. As a result, the euro fell to its lowest level in more than four years, helping push its American cousin higher. At 86.231, the U.S. Dollar Index rose to its highest level in a year, crimping prices for a number of dollar-denominated commodities traded globally. Oil prices retreated to a fourteen-week low of $71.61 per barrel, while the Reuters/CRB Index collapsed to 258.55, matching its lowest level in seven months. By comparison, cotton managed to fare relatively well in this environment against a broad mix of commodities.

A reason behind this relatively better performance from cotton may be due to the latest USDA WASDE report, which provides a first peek into projected market fundamentals for the new marketing year. The USDA looks for global cotton production to rebound an impressive 10.7% in 2010/11, but still trail the volume of global cotton mill demand for the fifth straight year. World cotton use is likely to expand to more than 119 million bales, the third-highest volume on record. As a result, the USDA anticipates global ending stocks will decline even further in 2010/11, tightening the world stocks-to-use ratio to the lowest level since 1994/95, a year when prices soared to more than a dollar per pound. While these tighter fundamentals are not enough evidence to conclude prices will climb even further in the coming marketing year, they do strongly imply that the market is unlikely to see prices settle closer to their ten-year average of just 55 cents per pound. While our short-term bias may be lower, tightness in cotton and yarn markets is acute in many markets around the world, supporting our long-term bullish slant that cotton prices are unlikely to retreat dramatically in coming months.

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