Monday, June 21, 2010
Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton
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Following the previous week’s surge, cotton prices on the ICE Futures U.S. exchange moderated last week, posting only modest gains during trading that saw the market grapple with news that pushed prices both higher and lower. At 81.78 cents per pound, nearby prices rose a modest 24 points for the week to the highest weekly close in a month. The market remains choppy, with daily closes for the Nearby range-bound in a 700-point channel over the last four months. For the week, dominant news that worked to pull the market higher was tighter anticipated fundamentals in China in the new marketing year, while an announcement of unrestricted exports from India partially offset this bullish sentiment.
First, an early peek at a Chinese balance sheet confirms the outlook for even tighter fundamentals in the new marketing year. Here, China’s National Cotton Market Monitoring System (NCMMS) is looking for domestic mill demand to outpace domestic supplies again in 2010/11, implying already-small ending stocks will shrink further by the end of the new marketing year, providing more fundamental evidence to support higher domestic prices. While the NCMMS looks for the Chinese harvest size to expand this autumn, it still looks for mill use to easily surpass the crop size for the twelfth straight year, implying China will have to import even more cotton in coming months. This could boost export prospects for several key foreign suppliers—particularly the U.S., India, and Brazil—and is likely to tighten global supplies, driving domestic and world prices higher. Already, average nearby prices on China’s ZCE so far in 2009/10 are up 2,908 yuan/ton (19.3 cents/lb) from the previous year and stand near a record high. If the 2010/11 ratio tightens as much as projected, this would be fundamentally friendly to even higher average domestic prices in the new marketing year.
Offsetting this sentiment somewhat, we reported here an announcement from India’s Ministry of Commerce of an apparent reversal of policy from just two months ago that now allows unregistered, duty-free cotton exports to all destinations. When restrictions were first imposed in April, U.S. prices closed limit-up and gapped even higher the next day on the assumption that U.S. supplies would fill the export void left from much of the absent Indian supplies. This determination essentially reverses these restrictions, with implementation due to take effect on October 1st, roughly when new-crop supplies begin to enter the market. While the market did not post a drop on the news similar to April’s jump, the outlook for higher Indian exports in 2010/11 could cast a bearish pall over the market in coming months.
On balance, we look for prices to remain elevated, if volatile, in coming months. A new policy shift to a weaker yuan, retreating certificated stocks, and an outlook for tight global fundamentals in the coming marketing year all point to this same view. The long-term concern is that higher—not to mention volatile—fiber costs and flat or easing prices for textile and apparel goods sold at retail imply tighter margins and increased risk exposure for those along the supply chain. Click here for a no-obligation conversation on how FCStone may be able to minimize this risk exposure for you.
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