Monday, February 27, 2012

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton

Domestic and global cotton prices trickled lower last week, burdened by weighty prospects for weaker cotton textile output in India and expectations of bulging global inventories of the fiber by the end of the next marketing year. At 87.48 cents per pound, ICE cotton futures Thursday touched their lowest so far this year before rebounding modestly Friday. Prices across every contract month retreated for the week, with several touching their lowest weekly settles so far this year. Foreign growths also joined the slide, with the ‘A’ Index tumbling 120 points Friday to a seven-week low of 98.15 cents. In China ZCE cotton futures sank across all contract months again Friday, with several reaching the lowest settles in more than six weeks. Total open interest expanded for the fifth straight session, stretching to a five-month high. The hemorrhaging also continues unabated for a range of Indian spot quotes, down sharply last week to the lowest levels this year. The widespread—if relatively modest—erosion in prices around the world last week reflects mounting bearish evidence hinting at looser balance sheets, both this marketing year and next.

Two key fundamental drivers impacting the market last week were from India and the USDA. First, early in the week came news that Indian cotton yarn production sank again in December, down -16.1% from a year earlier, the eighth straight month of double-digit year-over-year losses. This disappointing contraction in output confirmed 2011 as the worst year in at least a decade for the local cotton spinning sector. What’s more, the plunge reinforces our earlier view that cotton consumption forecasts by the USDA and India’s Cotton Advisory Board remain too generous. If these projections are whittled lower in coming months, Indian and global balance sheets for the current marketing year are likely to loosen, pointing to softer prices ahead.

The second key news for the week came from the USDA’s annual Agricultural Outlook Forum held near Washington, DC late last week. While unofficial, a tentative new-crop global balance sheet presented by USDA economists indicated world cotton production was likely to outpace mill demand for the third straight year in 2012/13. If so, ending stocks by the conclusion of the next marketing year are likely to rise, perhaps to a record 64.8 million bales. If this projected balance sheet comes to fruition, it will denote the loosest global fundamentals in eleven years, implying softer prices may lie ahead in 2012/13. Indeed, in a speech at the Forum, USDA Chief Economist Joseph Glauber expects crop prices to fall in the new marketing year, with cotton averaging 80 cents per pound. With futures presently closer to 90 cents and ‘A’ Index quotes even higher, last week’s erosion in price may be only a modest, early slip in a more protracted tumble to much lower prices later in 2012.

Friday, February 24, 2012

INTL FCStone 2nd Annual Agricultural & Economic Outlook Meeting: March 1 & 2, 2012

Managing the commodity price risk demands insight into many different segments of the commodity world. This Market Outlook meeting will enable attendees to explore both domestic and international issues affecting markets for the upcoming crop year. Click here to view the agenda and list of speakers or to register.

A Peek Behind the Curtain at USDA Balance Sheet Forecasts for Cotton 2012/13

For an early, unofficial peek @ USDA's 2012/13 cotton balance sheets for US, China, & world, please see http://goo.gl/z2APj. USDA cotton economists echoed USDA Chief Economist Joe Glauber yesterday, saying A-Index is expected to average between $.80-$1.00/pound in 2012/13. Good stuff starts after pg 10. Enjoy!