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After surging ahead in recent weeks on the outlook for tighter domestic and global fundamentals, cotton prices moderated last week in advance of the USDA’s next WASDE report, easing as technicals turned increasingly overbought. At 84.60 cents per pound, intraday trading last week reached the highest level in two years, following three straight weeks of gains that saw nearby futures soar 17 cents in less than a month. But the market may have overreached—at least for the time being—suggesting prices may consolidate in the short term as attention increasingly turns from tighter old-crop fundamentals to the longer-term outlook for a bigger U.S. and world harvest this autumn.
Wednesday’s WASDE report is likely to show few changes in U.S. old-crop fundamentals, tempering the recent streak of gains in domestic prices. Evidence suggests the U.S. balance sheet only may tighten marginally if at all, while global production is likely to see a more pronounced decline. We have long argued here that India’s harvest size may be overstated, and recent forecasts from China’s NBS here may color the USDA’s projections this week. This suggests global drivers may have more of an impact on the market this week than the domestic market, contrary to the trend reflected over recent months in the graph below.

On balance, futures trading last week was quiet and mostly dull, with traders focusing on the consensus outlook emanating from the International Cotton Association conference in Singapore. After the week’s high was set Monday and the low set Tuesday, trading during the rest of the week remained within that range, with volume well below trend. Presenters’ comments at the ICA meeting were mostly bullish, suggesting that supplies will remain tight through 2010, but likely higher plantings this spring in a number of markets are likely to boost global cotton supplies in 2011, unless crop troubles in China or India cause prices to “explode”. With the global economy on the rebound, increased demand for cotton in the new marketing year is all but certain. As a result, the longer-term outlook for price will be heavily influenced by how much global production rebounds, causing the market now to increasingly turn its attention to pre-plant weather conditions in key markets around the world.
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