Monday, September 27, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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Futures trading in New York firmed again last week, driving nearby prices to the highest levels in more than fifteen years as near-term supply concerns around the globe remain a dominant issue. At 99.93 cents per pound, Friday’s finish closed out the tenth weekly increase in the last twelve weeks. In fact, earlier in the week futures gapped as high as 103.55 cents before retreating lower to finish the week up 232 points. Backwardation remains endemic in every contract through 2012. The most-active December contract is up an astounding 26 cents—or more than 36%—in just two months, reflecting both a weaker dollar and concern over shorter crops and tight supplies in a number of markets.

First, the dollar continues to sink lower, boosting export-dependent commodity prices. Dollar Index futures tumbled for the fourth time in five weeks last week, crashing through support to 79.599 Friday, the lowest close in six months. Loose, accommodative monetary policies reinforced by Federal Reserve comments again last week are sure to keep the greenback under pressure for the foreseeable future, suggesting firmer cotton prices may rule for some time.

Next, crop prospects in key markets remain tilted in a more pessimistic—rather than optimistic—direction, further supporting the bulls’ position. The latest cotton assessment in the U.S. shows crop conditions are eroding from early this summer, suggesting yield prospects may fade in tandem as we suggested here. In particular, the USDA recently declared topsoil has turned “short or very short” of moisture over a large percentage of the South. Coupled with unwelcome weekend rains over open-boll cotton in much of the area, prospects for yield and quality could dim further, supportive of price.

China’s crop also remains a concern, plagued by late plantings this spring and heavy rains this fall that are delaying the harvest. Evidence here shows every key cotton-growing region in the North China Plain is seeing cumulative precipitation this season much heavier than normal. What’s more, many of these showers have fallen in recent days, when the crop needs dry days and cool nights to reach full potential. Instead, picking is delayed and the crop in the world’s largest producer could be compromised. In response, over the weekend China announced plans to expand its reserve auction by another 400,000 metric tons to 1.0 million tons, in order to ease near-term supplies for local mills. This move did little to ease panic buying, with every ZCE futures contract month surging to life-of-contract highs.

In light of these bullish indicators, the question remains how much of this sentiment is already factored into the market. While calling a top in a runaway bull market like this is a fool’s game, we take caution that any continued tightening in the fundamentals mostly may be priced into the market already. Futures may have further to climb this fall, but we remain wary of the volatility and look for any continued tightening in the fundamentals to have a more muted impact on driving prices higher.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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Nearby cotton futures surged last week to a fifteen-year high at 97.61 cents/lb, closing up 674 points, the second-biggest weekly leap in more than two and a half years. The latest jump extends a trend witnessed over the last six months, and especially over recent weeks. Friday’s finish closed out the ninth weekly increase in the last eleven weeks. The most-active December contract is up an astounding 25 cents in less than two months, reflecting both a weaker dollar and near-term supply concerns for the crop.

The U.S. Dollar Index retreated late in the week to its lowest since early August and soon could fall to the lowest in more than a year and a half, depending on Fed Reserve actions later this week. While the Fed isn't likely Tuesday to change its assessment of the U.S. economy or indicate a fresh round of asset purchases, there is an outside chance it could engage in a new round of stimulation, which would further weigh on the dollar and could boost export-dependent commodity prices further.

On the supply side, the market continues to fret over inclement weather impacting much of the Indian and Chinese crops. After a late start to the season, India’s monsoon is threatening to overstay its welcome. For fifteen of the last sixteen days, widespread showers across the country have outpaced daily norms, prompting speculation the harvest size may be smaller—or at least later—than forecast if monsoon rains last longer than normal. Already, the Confederation of Indian Textile Industries is calling for the government to delay cotton exports from October to January. Naturally, a postponement from the world’s second-largest exporter could drive global prices higher as importers scramble, but even the threat of more policy meddling is boosting prices.

In China, foul weather similarly is delaying the crop and may whittle back the harvest size. By late last week, only 5% of the nationwide crop was picked, well behind the 13.6% pace averaged over recent years. And cooler, rainy weather last week in key provinces did little to hasten the harvest, increasing the risk that wintry weather could compromise yields and quality in coming weeks. What’s more, daily offtake of reserve auction supplies has expanded to more than 20,000 tons each of the last eight sessions, supporting our view here that these supplies may expire before ample new-crop volumes enter the market. In response, spot and forward prices in China continued to advance. CNCE, ZCE and physical prices posted strong gains, with every ZCE cotton contract climbing to life-of-contract highs.

The tightest global fundamentals in fifteen years are supporting the highest global cotton prices also since the mid-1990s, with little opportunity for supply-side pressures to ease in the months to come. The ‘A’ Index breached $1.00 per pound recently, while Nearby prices in the U.S. also are on the cusp of closing above one dollar for the first time in years. What’s more, looking to the conclusion of the northern hemisphere harvest, crop concerns could materialize in spots other than China and India, further propelling the market higher. So while specs continue to pile into the boat for easy sailing today, it will pay to cast an eye to the horizon in 2011 for any tumultuous waterfalls ahead.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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The bulls extended their run on the market last week, with support from anticipated tighter fundamentals in several key countries firming the outlook. The most-traded December 2010 contract on the ICE Futures U.S. rose for the seventh time in the last eight weeks, closing Friday at 91.29 cents per pound, the highest in more than two years. Even more impressive, earlier in the week the nearby October contract closed as high as 91.32, a fifteen-year high. Perhaps more significantly, the fact that each of the next ten cotton futures contracts are backwardated all the way until December 2012 shows just how tight world stocks have become, with little relief likely until well into the new marketing year, at the earliest.

The latest USDA WASDE report released Friday morning re-confirmed this tightness in the market. In spite of a bigger harvest forecast, gains in demand projections easily outpaced higher revisions to supply, implying lower stock levels. In fact, expected exports for this marketing year jumped 500,000 bales to 15.5 million, the second-highest volume in history. As a result, the USDA pared back 2010/11 U.S. ending stocks to a scant 2.7 million bales, the lowest level in fifteen years, closely mirroring our forecast here. In turn, expanding demand and lower inventories drove September’s forecasted stocks-to-use ratio lower to just 14.1%, the lowest since the mid-1990s, concurring with the highest domestic prices since the mid-1990s.

While not as dramatic, the net result of changes in the global balance sheet echoes the tighter conditions seen in the U.S., driving world cotton prices even higher. Forecasted ending stocks for this marketing year eased lower from August to just 45.4 million bales, also tightening the projected stocks-to-use ratio to the lowest in fifteen years. Naturally, global cotton prices are up again on the outlook. Already, every forward contract on China’s Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange now stands at a life-of-contract high, and the most-distant July 2011 contract settled Monday at 19,200 yuan/ton ($1.29), a record. Similarly, the ‘A’ Index, a proxy for global cotton prices, breached $1.00 per pound Monday for the first time since 1995, trending in mirror-opposite fashion to the plunge in global fundamentals.

Looking ahead, two opposing issues cloud the medium-term forecast. First, spinners worldwide are complaining that climbing yarn prices have not been commensurate with rocketing cotton costs. Naturally, this implies even tighter margins for many yarn mills that have little margin to spare. In fact, anecdotal reports are emerging of some yarn operations idling spindles and selling their cotton inventories to capitalize on the jump in price, something unsustainable longer-term. But arguing for the bulls, excessive recent rains in key areas of China and India could dampen prospects for yield, quality, or at least timeliness of the pending harvest. While the trend remains our friend, a global textile supply chain already dealing with razor-thin margins will be in no mood to support elevated fiber costs in the long term. Nearer term, while the fundamentals do not support a sustained retracement, we would not be surprised to see prices begin to plateau as the northern hemisphere harvest commences.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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The cotton market remains in a world all its own, shrugging off this year’s tepid performance in the broader commodity complex and soaring to the highest levels in years. ICE cotton futures last week closed up for the eighth time in the last nine weeks, breaching 90 cents per pound to finish Friday at the highest close in fifteen years. Hints at increased Chinese demand for foreign cotton, a weaker U.S. dollar, and projected tighter domestic fundamentals are helping spur prices even higher, with little opportunity for a major retrenchment on the horizon.

First, sentiment is spreading that Chinese mills may boost cotton imports in coming months, as unseasonably cool temperatures and rain dampen prospects for crop quality and output. Already, the USDA is pegging imports into China—the world’s largest mill consumer and importer—at 12.5 million bales this marketing year, the second-highest level on record. Now, late-season precipitation on open-boll cotton in key provinces may erode harvest projections, causing mills hungry for the fiber to look abroad for supplies, adding more pressure to global prices. What’s more, evidence here suggests the government’s reserve auction supplies may be depleted by early October, before abundant new-crop supplies arrive on the market. The initial 600,000 metric-ton auction has dwindled by half over the last few weeks, hinting at a squeeze on near-term supplies in coming weeks before recently harvested cotton arrives on the market later this autumn.

Next, the weaker dollar also is helping propel cotton prices higher, auguring well for the export outlook this marketing year. The greenback continues to plumb a fifteen-year low against Japan’s yen, easing importers' cost of dollar-denominated cotton. Already, export commitments are at record highs for this point in the marketing year, with widespread demand up from several key U.S. markets. At 15.0 million bales, the USDA export target for 2010/11 is up 1.5 million bales from earlier this spring. Even so, we continue to find this forecast too conservative and look for it to climb further in coming months, boding well for higher prices.

Last, in spite of the dramatic tightening of U.S. cotton fundamentals over the last year and a half, we look for the market to tighten even further, supporting elevated prices. In our latest analysis here of how the USDA may adjust its September forecasts, we anticipate the demand side of the U.S. balance sheet may expand further, with both projected exports and mill use likely to rise. As a result, ending stocks for this marketing year may decline, pushing the stocks-to-use ratio even lower to the tightest level in fifteen years, fundamentally supporting the highest prices also in fifteen years.

What’s more, other signals support the bulls’ argument. Trend-following funds last week raised their net-long cotton futures/options position to the largest since March 2008. And the latest cotton on call position report discussed here shows record-high unfixed call sales helping drive futures higher. Amid all this bullishness, the contrarian in us points to widespread overbought technical indicators that are calling for a correction. But woe be the market watcher—or participant—that calls a top and risks being gored on a runaway bull market.