Monday, October 25, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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The ‘ascent’ portion of cotton’s roller-coaster ride continued last week, with a weak dollar and global supply concerns driving the market higher. While trading on the ICE Futures U.S. was constrained to an inside weekly range, nearby December prices still jumped 984 points from last week’s finish to 119.71 cents/lb by Friday afternoon, the highest weekly close in 140 years. This latest advance marks the thirteenth higher weekly close in the last sixteen weeks. Not since another supply constraint—a northern blockade of southern commerce during the American Civil War in the 1860s—have cotton prices been as high.

Issues driving the market last week primarily came from developments in China and the U.S., together accounting for about two-fifths of global cotton production. In China, an unexpected bump in interest rates—the first since 2007—sent traders scrambling. The action could hinder textile exports from the world’s largest textile producer and help curb excessive speculation in some markets. While this bearish news normally would be likely to exert some pressure on domestic prices, fundamental support remains intact and local cotton prices are still on the rise. On balance, late-week declines in the dollar overshadowed its Tuesday rebound from the interest rate move, pulling the greenback even lower and boosting prices for a range of commodities—including cotton—even higher.

Across China, new weather concerns discussed here are dimming producers’ sentiment for yield, production, and quality across much of the country. Parts of Anhui, Shaanxi, and Xinjiang reported either cooler or wetter conditions over the last week, unwelcome news for the world’s largest cotton producer. What’s more, this weekend a new northern cold front plowed south across unpicked cotton in China, bringing more strong winds, colder temperatures, and unwelcome rains to much of China. The country’s main meteorological agency is calling for temperatures to plunge 14-16 °C shortly in Hebei, Shandong, and Jiangsu, slowing harvesting and hurting fiber quality. Already, key forecasting organizations are paring back their projections—again—for the size of this year’s China harvest.

By Friday, the market soared limit up on news of heavy overnight rain and hail across the Texas High Plains discussed here. Almost four inches of rain Thursday evening pounded fields full of beautiful pre-sold cotton, suggesting yield losses and discoloration may be in the offing for the local crop. With bolls open on virtually all the state’s cotton but the Texas harvest only one-quarter complete, the timing could not have been worse. While damage estimates are premature right now, early guesses figure 50,000 to 100,000 bales may have been lost.

The same old approach for spinning mills of buying on-call and hoping for a pullback is going wrong in the worst of ways. Conditioned by years of oversupply, temporary price spikes, and virtually no risk management, spinners outside China have been caught unprepared for the great bull market of 2010 as the balance sheet continues to tighten. While there is grumbling in the mill community about idling spindles rather than running such expensive cotton, there still is scant evidence that demand is ebbing. After the market recovered so quickly from last week’s sell-off, we see little to stop it from making new highs in the coming week. To learn more about how we can help you better manage this exposure with a comprehensive risk management strategy to protect against the market’s peaks and swoons, please click here.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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Cotton saw one of its most volatile periods on record last week, driven by a rush of panic buying and then panic selling as futures soared to unprecedented heights, only to tumble limit-down late in the week. Those two old market movers—fear and greed—clearly were in play last week, only on different days, it would seem. Cotton traded to new highs three different days, only to see its biggest collapse—and widest one-day range—in years by Friday. On balance, for the week the market touched record-high prices, ranged over 1,255 points, and covered an unheard-of 993 points on Friday alone.

Trading on the ICE Futures U.S. began the week with a bang, soaring limit-up on news that India had suspended registrations of cotton for export this year, only ten days after opening the registration period. Indian traders had already registered the government’s maximum of 5.5 million bales, reflecting not only soaring foreign demand but locals’ concern that the government may hinder cotton exports again in coming months.

Following Tuesday’s consolidation and an inside day Wednesday, the market was poised for another climb and test of its all-time record high Thursday. A confluence of several factors around the world helped propel U.S. cotton futures dramatically higher this day. First, cotton on China’s Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange closed limit-up on near-record open interest, following news of mills’ unusually low cotton inventories across the country. Next, news from India further fueled this bullish fire. The country’s textile sector redoubled its calls to the government to postpone cotton exports until 2011, to the panicked dismay of importing mills across Asia. Also, disappointing economic reports in the U.S. paved the way for further quantitative easing by the Fed, dragging the dollar lower and pushing commodities higher. As a result, all 2010/11 contracts closed limit-up again. Synthetic prices for December closed at 118.87 cents/lb, setting a record high in the 140-year history of the exchange.

After gapping higher on follow-though trading, the bulls lost their appetite in early Friday action and the bears ruled the day. From the intra-day high of 119.80 cents/lb—a record—the market plummeted an astounding 993 points to settle limit down at 109.87, crashing -8.3%, the largest non-synthetic daily range ever.

In spite of Friday’s tumble, cotton futures still managed to rise for the week, up for the twelfth time in the last fifteen weeks. Several factors support this string of gains to the highest weekly close in fifteen years. Unfixed call sales stand at a record level here, and many spinners still need to buy December to fix their on-call purchases. Surging U.S. export commitments detailed here remain on a record pace, despite a modest start to shipments this marketing year. And suspicions are rising here of disappointing yields in China, hinting at more imports in coming months. Not to mention, the impact from a weaker dollar and bullish specs and funds cannot be overstated. With little fundamental history to suggest a price range for the market and constrain these volatile swings, it appears these wild fluctuations may persist, reflecting the need for a comprehensive risk management strategy to protect against the market’s peaks and swoons. To learn more about how we can help you manage this risk, please click here.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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Cotton rebounded impressively last week on the ICE Futures U.S., buoyed by a converging swell of different factors that lifted the market to the highest levels in years. Nearby December futures soared 915 points on the week to close Friday at 107.17 cents per pound, the highest close in more than fifteen years. The market has risen eleven of the last fourteen weeks, tacking on 37.7% in less than three and a half months, one of the steepest and biggest gains ever recorded. Every contract enjoyed the upswing last week, with several climbing to life-of-contract highs Friday. From China’s return from holiday to India’s soaring export registrations to tighter fundamentals to a weaker dollar, several issues were at play to boost cotton prices last week.

First, the siren song of soaring spot and forward markets in China helped propel global cotton prices higher. After returning from the week-long National Day holidays, Chinese traders wasted little time in driving cotton prices on the Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange limit-up late in the week. While harvest weather was favorably dry across much of the country during the break, picking remains behind schedule and mills’ appetite for the fiber remained voracious, in spite of even higher prices. Accordingly, traders were in no mood to be caught short, particularly given the rebound in ICE prices during the holiday. Every ZCE cotton contract soared late in the week with most reaching life-of-contract highs, and China’s CNCE closed limit-up two sessions in a row, helping justify the gains on the ICE.

Next, an impressive—and largely unanticipated—surge in cotton registrations in India threatens to cap this outlet for forthcoming exports, and may fan the protectionist flames further against additional shipments abroad, driving prices higher. The Indian government’s window for shippers and merchants to register new exports for later shipment is slamming shut just ten days after first opening. Since October 1st, traders already applied for export permits totaling 5.5 million bales, equaling the government’s entire export allocation for the marketing year imposed here. The surge reflects both desperately low inventories in mills across Asia and traders trying to ship as much cotton as possible, as soon as possible, both before the tax-free limit of 5.5 million bales is reached and in case the government restricts exports again. While we demonstrated here that the harvest will easily surpass domestic mills’ needs for the eighth straight year, we do not look for the government to ignore the demands from the local textile industry and raise cotton export limits soon. As we showed here, despite its best of intentions, the government’s meddling in open-market cotton trade to contain domestic prices is backfiring and helping propel both Indian and global cotton prices higher.

Additionally, the USDA added further fuel to the bullish fire in its latest WASDE report. The October balance sheet released late last week here pointed to tighter global fundamentals than earlier anticipated, helping strengthen prices further. In particular, world ending stocks were revised lower from last month’s 45.4 million-bale forecast to 44.7 million. The biggest changes came in China, where anticipated production fell one million bales to 31.5 million. Chinese beginning and ending stocks shrank and forecasted imports climbed. As a result, the world stocks-to-use ratio declined even further from last month’s 37.7% to 37.0%, the lowest in sixteen years, concurring with the highest year-to-date average prices also in sixteen years.

Finally, outside the world of cotton, the U.S. dollar continues to plumb new depths, helping to boost prices for a range of export commodities. The U.S. dollar index fell for the fourth straight week as monetary policy remains exceedingly loose, settling at 77.563 Friday, its lowest close in almost nine months. Friday’s less-than-stellar U.S. employment report exacerbated worries over the U.S. economy. And following the weekend IMF summit that failed to ease tensions over a festering international ‘currency war’, the Federal Reserve is set to provide additional stimuli to the sagging economy, which is likely to weigh on the dollar and boost commodity prices even further.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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In anticipation of the USDA’s next release in coming days of the latest U.S. cotton supply and demand projections for new-crop cotton, FCStone prepared forecasts and commentary on how these projections may change from recent months:

U.S. production for 2010-2011: Down 300,000 bales to 18.5 million bales. While yields are still likely to be well above last year, crop conditions generally have eased gradually over the last two months across much of the cotton belt, suggesting yields may not be as robust as earlier anticipated. While this trend is happening in several states, we are keeping a close eye on Texas and the Carolinas. Here, the northeastern corner of the cotton belt received well over eight inches of rain last week, drenching open-boll cotton and fading harvest prospects. Also, the condition of the Texas crop still in the field has eroded to the lowest since June, dimming earlier optimism somewhat.

U.S. Exports: Up for the fourth straight month, rising from 15.5 million to 15.7 million bales. Already, early-season commitments stand at a record 8.9 million running bales, hinting at robust exports later this marketing year. Adverse pre-harvest weather in several cotton-growing areas of China was unwelcome and may hinder production and quality, suggesting the world’s largest importer may need to import even more fiber in 2010/11, with much of that coming from the U.S. What’s more, delayed exports from India discussed here also could bode well for shippers in the U.S. and Australia this marketing year.

U.S. Ending Stocks: With a likely smaller anticipated supply and projected demand bigger from last month, ending stock forecasts for October are likely lower by 500,000 bales from September to 2.2 million bales, the lowest level in more than five decades. Unsurprisingly, recent daily closes on The ICE here touched the highest levels in years in response. We look for the USDA to find expectations of higher demand and lower ending stocks will tighten the anticipated stocks-to-use ratio this year to closer to 14%. This would be the tightest ratio since 1994/95—the last time average prices were as high—and supportive of elevated prices well into the winter.

In spite of this increasingly tighter outlook for U.S. cotton fundamentals, we caution that any increase in U.S. prices may not be commensurate with the tightening in the balance sheet, as it has been over recent months. As the graph below demonstrates, the jump in futures prices has outpaced the tightening in the stocks-to-use ratio over the last two months. And October’s anticipated 12% ratio—while tighter than any point in years—still is not tight enough to support average September prices, let alone even higher prices in October. This extrapolation brings with it the pitfalls inherent in any extrapolation; we caution that October prices even could slide modestly lower, despite the tighter outlook for the domestic market.

While the anticipated tighter evolution of domestic fundamentals is impressive, we temper this outlook with a forecast for looser global balance sheet. In particular, we look for the Indian harvest to jump to a record size, on the strength of unprecedented yields. That having been said, it may be a few months before Indian policymakers allow new-crop shipments to resume, suggesting global exports—and world prices—may remain dear through the conclusion of harvest.