Monday, September 27, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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Futures trading in New York firmed again last week, driving nearby prices to the highest levels in more than fifteen years as near-term supply concerns around the globe remain a dominant issue. At 99.93 cents per pound, Friday’s finish closed out the tenth weekly increase in the last twelve weeks. In fact, earlier in the week futures gapped as high as 103.55 cents before retreating lower to finish the week up 232 points. Backwardation remains endemic in every contract through 2012. The most-active December contract is up an astounding 26 cents—or more than 36%—in just two months, reflecting both a weaker dollar and concern over shorter crops and tight supplies in a number of markets.

First, the dollar continues to sink lower, boosting export-dependent commodity prices. Dollar Index futures tumbled for the fourth time in five weeks last week, crashing through support to 79.599 Friday, the lowest close in six months. Loose, accommodative monetary policies reinforced by Federal Reserve comments again last week are sure to keep the greenback under pressure for the foreseeable future, suggesting firmer cotton prices may rule for some time.

Next, crop prospects in key markets remain tilted in a more pessimistic—rather than optimistic—direction, further supporting the bulls’ position. The latest cotton assessment in the U.S. shows crop conditions are eroding from early this summer, suggesting yield prospects may fade in tandem as we suggested here. In particular, the USDA recently declared topsoil has turned “short or very short” of moisture over a large percentage of the South. Coupled with unwelcome weekend rains over open-boll cotton in much of the area, prospects for yield and quality could dim further, supportive of price.

China’s crop also remains a concern, plagued by late plantings this spring and heavy rains this fall that are delaying the harvest. Evidence here shows every key cotton-growing region in the North China Plain is seeing cumulative precipitation this season much heavier than normal. What’s more, many of these showers have fallen in recent days, when the crop needs dry days and cool nights to reach full potential. Instead, picking is delayed and the crop in the world’s largest producer could be compromised. In response, over the weekend China announced plans to expand its reserve auction by another 400,000 metric tons to 1.0 million tons, in order to ease near-term supplies for local mills. This move did little to ease panic buying, with every ZCE futures contract month surging to life-of-contract highs.

In light of these bullish indicators, the question remains how much of this sentiment is already factored into the market. While calling a top in a runaway bull market like this is a fool’s game, we take caution that any continued tightening in the fundamentals mostly may be priced into the market already. Futures may have further to climb this fall, but we remain wary of the volatility and look for any continued tightening in the fundamentals to have a more muted impact on driving prices higher.

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