Monday, June 14, 2010

Weekly Commodity Recap: Cotton


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After retreating for nine straight sessions, the cotton market came roaring back last week, with nearby prices staging a weekly reversal to the upside and closing higher for four straight days before finishing the week at 81.54 cents per pound, the highest weekly close since mid-May. For the week, the July contract gained 448 points, October rose 384 points, December tacked on 366 points, and March climbed 351 points. One key factor driving prices higher has been a pronounced contraction in certificated stocks. Since reaching the highest level in a year and a half in early June, cert stocks have fallen six of the last seven trading sessions, shrinking by more than a fourth since then. A surge of more than 624,000 bales in old-crop sales—mostly to China—confirmed where most of these decerts are going. And with May Chinese cotton imports jumping another 30.6% from last year to more than 900,000 bales, Chinese mills’ voracious appetite for foreign cotton remains evident. We look for more decerts and firmer prices into the July notice period, with the outlook leaning more bullish in coming weeks.

Longer term, crop prospects are improving in several markets, suggesting the autumn harvest in the northern hemisphere may be bigger than currently anticipated and could weigh on prices later this year. Many analysts—including FCStone—agree that timely plantings and favorable weather could boost the U.S. harvest well above the 16.7 million bales currently anticipated by the USDA. In particular, the overall West Texas crop is off to one of its best starts in years, hinting at a more optimistic yield outlook—and presumably a bigger cushion of exportable supplies—for the world’s largest cotton exporter.

Similarly, monsoon activity is accelerating and intensifying across much of India, helping advance cotton plantings. After getting off to a slower-than-normal start, the monsoon has advanced northward rapidly in recent days. Additionally, evidence here shows energy available to the monsoon is spiking well above average and indeed rains last week were well above model expectations. As a result, cotton and groundnuts are expected to see a steady and timely upturn in planting over the next week, boosting early optimism for the crop in a country that devotes more land to cotton than any other.

On balance, this view supports an outlook friendlier to the shorter-term bull, and perhaps less friendly to the longer-term bear. Global cotton supplies are likely to remain tight until new crop offers come on the market this fall. But even then, a larger world harvest still is likely to fall short of global mill demand for cotton for the fifth straight year, albeit not as much as this marketing year. Regardless, this forecast implies global ending stocks in the coming 2010/11 marketing year could fall to the lowest in years, driving the stocks-to-use ratio to the tightest since 1994/95, when world prices averaged over 90 cents per pound.

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