Monday, January 25, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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Cotton futures retreated for the third straight week last week, dropping more than a cent to the lowest weekly close since mid-November in response to a stronger dollar, weaker alternative crop prices, and credit concerns in China. The 2010 retrenchment in price continued last week, with nearby futures easing lower three of the four trading days during the holiday-shortened week, before settling Friday at 71.07 cents per pound.

One key issue weighing on cotton prices is a resurgent dollar. The greenback rose sharply last week, boosted by a weaker euro, news that China was tightening its monetary and credit policies, and an increase in demand for lower yielding assets. The U.S. Dollar Index finished the week at 78.43, its highest weekly close in five months. In addition to cotton, the stronger dollar also weighed on prices for other ag commodities, dragging cotton lower.

Corn, wheat, and soybean prices all extended their 2010 declines again in the latest week, in concert with lower cotton prices. However, the losses in other key competing crops outpaced the latest weekly decline in cotton prices, implying these other crops dragged cotton prices lower. Since the start of the year, nearby cotton futures are off 6.5%. But wheat, corn, and bean prices are faring even worse, falling between 8-13% over just the first three weeks of the year. These relatively lower prices for other crops support our earlier outlook that cotton may buy back land for spring plantings in a number of markets, particularly the United States.

Finally, the week brought news of efforts in China to slow lending in order to ease concern of a ballooning credit bubble and proactively tamp out inflationary sparks. The country’s regulatory commission instructed banks to slow access to loans in order to tighten loose credit standards. However, Chinese textile and apparel manufacturers already have seen growth in capital investment in the sector slow considerably in recent years. Any further restrictions on new investment may crimp fiber demand longer term, hindering the price outlook.

The decline in U.S. cotton futures prompted another strong week of exports. The latest export sales report pegged net new sales of upland and Pima at 347,000 bales, one of the strongest showings this week. Similarly, weekly exports climbed to 233,000 bales, the second-highest level this marketing year. China remains—by far—the largest buyer of U.S. cotton, but we look for interest from the region to slow as the Chinese New Year approaches in mid-February.

Barring another financial market meltdown or a double-dip recession, our opinion remains that cotton demand will continue to outpace production (even with a presumed increase in plantings). As we discussed last week here, mills are still quite short, and still have on-call contracts that need to be fixed. For these reasons, we believe that while cotton may trade lower in the next few days or even the next few weeks, it will find underlying demand limiting its downward correction witnessed over the first few weeks of the New Year.

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