Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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Cotton retreated further on the week, with nearby prices closing lower four of the last five trading days, finishing the week at 77.83 cents per pound, its lowest daily close in four weeks. The weakness came both from the supply and demand sides, attributable both to a bigger U.S. crop and to worries about the economic outlook in several key markets around the world, notably Europe, the U.S., and China. On the supply side, the market sank this week on learning of a bigger-than-expected plantings estimate from the USDA. The government’s acreage forecast here implies a bigger-than-expected domestic harvest this fall, given a bigger-than-expected increase in cotton plantings this spring. At 10.909 million acres, total cotton plantings are expected to be up 19.2% from last year’s 9.149 million acres, the biggest percent jump in fifteen years.

On the demand side, debt financing and credit concerns remain a drag on European markets, threatening to spread across the continent and afflict other countries around the globe. These concerns are weighing on consumer confidence in several European markets, sapping shoppers’ enthusiasm to spend. In particular, European sales of textiles, clothing, and footwear—widely viewed as discretionary, non-essential purchases—sank -0.4% in April from a year earlier, offsetting four straight months of gains. Naturally, slipping sales in this category bode poorly for global demand for cotton.

Also, the outlook for the U.S. economy dimmed in the last week, further weighing on prospects for global cotton demand. From consumer confidence to factory orders to payrolls, several indicators sank in recent days, suggesting at best a slower rebound in economic activity, and at worst an increased likelihood of a double-dip recession. After reporting three consecutive monthly increases in consumer confidence, the Conference Board reported a much steeper-than-expected drop in consumer confidence in June. The organization’s index of consumer confidence fell to 52.9 in June from a downwardly revised 62.7 in May. Adding to the negative tone, a barometer of business activity pointed to contraction in May. After reporting eight consecutive monthly increases in new orders for manufactured goods, the Commerce Department released a report Friday showing that factory orders fell much more than expected in May. Factory orders fell 1.4% in May, more than twice as big a drop as analysts were expecting. Finally, the week concluded with a thud on the release of the latest employment data. Non-farm payrolls fell by 125,000 jobs in June, the first drop in seven months. While most of the plunge was due to the steep drop in the number of temporary workers for the census, the loss still outpaced forecasts by market watchers. Given the weaker tone of recent economic news, it comes as little surprise that cotton prices—which are typically well-correlated to economic activity—plunged again last week.

Lastly, the news from China last week also cast a pall over the cotton market. Even though China’s National Bureau of Statistics revised 2009 GDP growth across the country to 9.1% from its earlier estimate of 8.7%, signals point to mounting concern that growth may slow this year. Growth in auto sales slowed in June as the government acted to tighten credit in order to control inflation and cool the economy. Similarly, the government is reigning in speculation in the housing market, in hopes of containing inflationary pressures, but is also inadvertently hindering employment in housing-related professions. Foreshadowing slower growth in the economy, the Shanghai composite index recently fell to a fifteen-month low. Should slower economic growth take root in this market, it could hinder prospects for rapid growth in retail demand for cotton products in one of the most promising growth markets in the world.

While we still point to the longer-term bullish fundamentals inherent in the market, the shorter-term technicals have eroded rapidly in recent days. Price is now just above major support in the form of the 200-day moving average and the bull trendline going back to the March 2009 lows. Short-term moving averages (nine- and ten-day averages) are crossing down and under the medium- and longer-term averages. Last week also saw December plunge through support at 50% and 61.8% retracement points, closing lower for six straight sessions. Friday’s close cast a negative light on the weekly chart, confirming the “toppy” price action of the previous two weeks. Looking ahead, prices this week will take their cue from Friday’s next WASDE report and sentiment behind a recently weaker dollar. Also, coming days promise to be critical to the technical outlook as the weekly December chart approaches long-term support in its sixteen-month up-trend channel.

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