Monday, March 22, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


for more analysis like this, please click here.

Cotton prices managed to rebound last week, in spite of mounting bearish evidence hinting at the increased potential for a pullback. Viewed from the bulls’ perspective, cotton’s climb last week came on news of higher unfixed on-call sales and the biggest U.S. cotton exports in nine months. The CFTC’s latest Cotton on Call report indicates unfixed on-call sales are growing at a rapid pace, particularly in the July contract. Total unfixed on-call sales merchants made to textile mills jumped to 68,829 contracts, the highest in two years, supporting higher ICE futures. The July contract rose by 816 contracts to a record 23,159. There are only 11,713 unfixed on-call purchases merchants have made from growers, providing very little in the way of an “offset”. As mills continue to add to their on-call position, it represents more futures that will need to be bought during a smaller window of time, suggesting higher prices are likely.



The bulls also point to the latest report of robust sales and shipments abroad for cotton. Total exports of Upland and Pima cotton reached 312,661 480-lb. bales in the week ending March 11, driven by soaring volume to America’s largest market. Exports destined for Chinese textile mills surged to 152,268 bales, the highest level so far this marketing year. In fact, this weekly volume was almost as much as the U.S. shipped to all other markets combined, reflecting China’s expanding share of total U.S. cotton exports over the last several months. The surging shipments to China in recent weeks echo our observation here of rapid growth in total Chinese cotton imports and suggest cumulative U.S. exports to China this marketing year may climb to the second-highest level ever recorded, something certainly bullish for price.

But from a stronger dollar to higher acreage forecasts for spring plantings, different bearish indicators are looming and likely to offset much of the enthusiasm for higher prices in coming weeks. Greece’s ongoing debt problems led to a weaker euro and stronger dollar last week, limiting gains on commodities. The U.S. Dollar Index finished the week higher at 80.7, rivaling its highest level in 21 months and hindering gains across a variety of commodities.

Finally, some price impacts may be coming from excellent topsoil moisture reports across the South and private acreage estimates released last week. One planted acreage report disseminated last week pegged spring U.S. cotton plantings at 10.3 million acres, well up from a year earlier. The market is likely to trend sideways in coming days, in anticipation of the March 31 Prospective Plantings report from the USDA. While the market looks for an increase in cotton acres this spring, the question is how much. Certainly, weather in coming months will impact yields—something difficult to accurately gauge this early in the year—but one early hint at the potential for better-than-average yields is ample topsoil moisture. The latest nationwide map here shows much of the South is wetter than normal, with no cotton acres reported as abnormally dry. This early sign hints that the surge in price over the last year may slow in coming weeks under the weight of a much larger cotton crop.

No comments:

Post a Comment