Monday, July 26, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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After beginning last week on a sour note, cotton futures on the ICE Futures U.S. rallied impressively in the second half of the week to finish at the highest close in over a month on sentiment of fading near-term supplies. The market sank Monday and Tuesday as traders took their cues from the weather and from a bearish shift in the latest spec/hedge report. Futures retreated a combined 218 points over these two days, with the most-traded December contract briefly touching 72.96 cents per pound during Tuesday trading, the lowest level in almost five months.

Near-ideal weather across West Texas weighed heavily on the market early in the week. Speculation is mounting that if weather remains favorable, cotton yields and production could expand much higher this season than originally thought. Anecdotally, many Texas producers report the best-looking crop in years. In its latest report on the shape of the Texas crop, the National Agricultural Statistics Service reported 74% of the state’s cotton was in good or excellent condition, the highest share for this same week in more than a quarter century of recordkeeping. What’s more, this share is up three percentage points from the previous week and eighteen points from just three weeks ago, suggesting that crop conditions—and prospects for higher yields—continue to improve with each passing week in the nation’s largest cotton-producing state.

Early in the week the latest spec/hedge report from the ICE exchange added to the bearish view. The report confirmed specs had turned net short for the first time in thirteen months, weighing further on the market. Specs are now net short 2.3% versus 1.9% net long the previous week. The net spec short position is 3,724 or 2.3% of total open interest, the most in seventeen months. After trending closely with the December contract for about a year and a half, the gradual erosion in net longs over the last two months confirms specs are increasingly disillusioned with the long side of the market, helping drag December lower.



But by Wednesday, market sentiment had turned more bullish, as traders turned their attention to the plummeting volume of certificated stocks still on hand in the U.S. By the end of the week, the volume of cert stocks deliverable against ICE futures contracts had fallen to 55,389 bales, the lowest in five and a half years. From a seasonal peak of 1.08 million hardly a month and a half ago, stocks are down more than a million bales, introducing a bit of panic buying into the market by late in the week. Dwindling exchange stocks are making commercial traders increasingly anxious that new-crop supplies may not replenish the current dearth of supplies by the time they need to take delivery, prompting the buying. From Tuesday’s low, December rebounded the next three days, rising a combined 233 points to 75.34 cents, the highest close in three weeks.

Looking ahead, the diverging trends between a net short spec/hedge report and dangerously low cert stocks are unlikely to be resolved soon, suggesting the market may see bigger-than-normal volatility in the near term. But longer term, once new-crop supplies begin to reach the market this fall, a rebound in certificated stocks to more normal levels may begin to weigh on the market. Should weather remain conducive for yields across much of West Texas, any renewed upswing in prices that began last week may prove difficult to sustain.

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