Monday, September 13, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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The bulls extended their run on the market last week, with support from anticipated tighter fundamentals in several key countries firming the outlook. The most-traded December 2010 contract on the ICE Futures U.S. rose for the seventh time in the last eight weeks, closing Friday at 91.29 cents per pound, the highest in more than two years. Even more impressive, earlier in the week the nearby October contract closed as high as 91.32, a fifteen-year high. Perhaps more significantly, the fact that each of the next ten cotton futures contracts are backwardated all the way until December 2012 shows just how tight world stocks have become, with little relief likely until well into the new marketing year, at the earliest.

The latest USDA WASDE report released Friday morning re-confirmed this tightness in the market. In spite of a bigger harvest forecast, gains in demand projections easily outpaced higher revisions to supply, implying lower stock levels. In fact, expected exports for this marketing year jumped 500,000 bales to 15.5 million, the second-highest volume in history. As a result, the USDA pared back 2010/11 U.S. ending stocks to a scant 2.7 million bales, the lowest level in fifteen years, closely mirroring our forecast here. In turn, expanding demand and lower inventories drove September’s forecasted stocks-to-use ratio lower to just 14.1%, the lowest since the mid-1990s, concurring with the highest domestic prices since the mid-1990s.

While not as dramatic, the net result of changes in the global balance sheet echoes the tighter conditions seen in the U.S., driving world cotton prices even higher. Forecasted ending stocks for this marketing year eased lower from August to just 45.4 million bales, also tightening the projected stocks-to-use ratio to the lowest in fifteen years. Naturally, global cotton prices are up again on the outlook. Already, every forward contract on China’s Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange now stands at a life-of-contract high, and the most-distant July 2011 contract settled Monday at 19,200 yuan/ton ($1.29), a record. Similarly, the ‘A’ Index, a proxy for global cotton prices, breached $1.00 per pound Monday for the first time since 1995, trending in mirror-opposite fashion to the plunge in global fundamentals.

Looking ahead, two opposing issues cloud the medium-term forecast. First, spinners worldwide are complaining that climbing yarn prices have not been commensurate with rocketing cotton costs. Naturally, this implies even tighter margins for many yarn mills that have little margin to spare. In fact, anecdotal reports are emerging of some yarn operations idling spindles and selling their cotton inventories to capitalize on the jump in price, something unsustainable longer-term. But arguing for the bulls, excessive recent rains in key areas of China and India could dampen prospects for yield, quality, or at least timeliness of the pending harvest. While the trend remains our friend, a global textile supply chain already dealing with razor-thin margins will be in no mood to support elevated fiber costs in the long term. Nearer term, while the fundamentals do not support a sustained retracement, we would not be surprised to see prices begin to plateau as the northern hemisphere harvest commences.

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