Monday, March 29, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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Futures prices eased lower last week, remaining well within a six-cent trading range established over the last five weeks as concern mounts over soaring fiber costs and higher domestic cotton plantings this spring. Nearby cotton prices retreated 2.49 cents to finish the week at 79.69 cents per pound, the lowest weekly close since mid-February. While the fundamentals continue to point to higher prices for the 2010/11 marketing year, near-term bulls are running out of steam, promising to make for volatile spring trading.

A handful of factors that contributed to drive prices higher in recent months seem to be losing steam in recent days. First, on the old-crop supply side, government efforts in China to relieve transportation bottlenecks in Xinjiang Province—China’s largest cotton producer—finally seem to be having their desired effect. Daily railcars for moving cotton from farms in the West to mills in the East increased to 170-180 since March 23, and could possibly increase further to 250. While this is rather late in the procurement season for the area, the increase is likely to ease supply constraints somewhat, whether actual or perceived. Additionally, the dollar is trading at a nine-month high on European debt concerns that are sinking the euro, hindering gains in commodity prices.

On the demand side, complaints from downstream producers in different markets are mounting over perceived exorbitant yarn prices. Indian knitwear manufacturers are unsettled over soaring cotton and yarn prices, with reports suggesting the sector is planning to ask buyers to pay one-fifth more to meet rising yarn prices. Similarly in neighboring Pakistan, angst over soaring yarn prices and perceived tight supplies here is pitting the yarn sector against downstream interests like never before, with the exasperated government unlikely to find a suitable compromise to satisfy both sectors. In China, rapid gains in cotton and yarn prices also are eating into the profit of downstream manufacturers. In particular, smaller yarn and fabric makers are cutting production or increasing polyester use as we demonstrated here to combat the surge in cotton fiber and yarn prices.

Another consequence of the sustained rise in cotton prices witnessed over the last year is likely to be a dramatic jump in cotton acreage in several key producers around the world. In particular, an issue likely to be closely watched by the market this week is the annual Prospective Plantings report from the USDA. This report is expected to show increases of 1 to 1.5 million acres, with potential production of 16 million bales or more. This would mark a reversal in trend from the declines witnessed over each of the last three years and a dramatic rebound from the 9.1 million acres planted a year ago, the lowest in more than a quarter century. While a 16 million-bale crop is comparable to the average volume produced over the last three decades, it is much larger than the harvest sizes each of the last two years. While we remain bullish for price over the long term, these issues are likely to temper much of the enthusiasm for robust gains in price witnessed over the last year. Instead, more modest gains in the long term may be more likely, while downstream resistance from fabric and apparel manufacturers is likely to make for choppy trading in coming weeks.

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