Monday, October 11, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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Cotton rebounded impressively last week on the ICE Futures U.S., buoyed by a converging swell of different factors that lifted the market to the highest levels in years. Nearby December futures soared 915 points on the week to close Friday at 107.17 cents per pound, the highest close in more than fifteen years. The market has risen eleven of the last fourteen weeks, tacking on 37.7% in less than three and a half months, one of the steepest and biggest gains ever recorded. Every contract enjoyed the upswing last week, with several climbing to life-of-contract highs Friday. From China’s return from holiday to India’s soaring export registrations to tighter fundamentals to a weaker dollar, several issues were at play to boost cotton prices last week.

First, the siren song of soaring spot and forward markets in China helped propel global cotton prices higher. After returning from the week-long National Day holidays, Chinese traders wasted little time in driving cotton prices on the Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange limit-up late in the week. While harvest weather was favorably dry across much of the country during the break, picking remains behind schedule and mills’ appetite for the fiber remained voracious, in spite of even higher prices. Accordingly, traders were in no mood to be caught short, particularly given the rebound in ICE prices during the holiday. Every ZCE cotton contract soared late in the week with most reaching life-of-contract highs, and China’s CNCE closed limit-up two sessions in a row, helping justify the gains on the ICE.

Next, an impressive—and largely unanticipated—surge in cotton registrations in India threatens to cap this outlet for forthcoming exports, and may fan the protectionist flames further against additional shipments abroad, driving prices higher. The Indian government’s window for shippers and merchants to register new exports for later shipment is slamming shut just ten days after first opening. Since October 1st, traders already applied for export permits totaling 5.5 million bales, equaling the government’s entire export allocation for the marketing year imposed here. The surge reflects both desperately low inventories in mills across Asia and traders trying to ship as much cotton as possible, as soon as possible, both before the tax-free limit of 5.5 million bales is reached and in case the government restricts exports again. While we demonstrated here that the harvest will easily surpass domestic mills’ needs for the eighth straight year, we do not look for the government to ignore the demands from the local textile industry and raise cotton export limits soon. As we showed here, despite its best of intentions, the government’s meddling in open-market cotton trade to contain domestic prices is backfiring and helping propel both Indian and global cotton prices higher.

Additionally, the USDA added further fuel to the bullish fire in its latest WASDE report. The October balance sheet released late last week here pointed to tighter global fundamentals than earlier anticipated, helping strengthen prices further. In particular, world ending stocks were revised lower from last month’s 45.4 million-bale forecast to 44.7 million. The biggest changes came in China, where anticipated production fell one million bales to 31.5 million. Chinese beginning and ending stocks shrank and forecasted imports climbed. As a result, the world stocks-to-use ratio declined even further from last month’s 37.7% to 37.0%, the lowest in sixteen years, concurring with the highest year-to-date average prices also in sixteen years.

Finally, outside the world of cotton, the U.S. dollar continues to plumb new depths, helping to boost prices for a range of export commodities. The U.S. dollar index fell for the fourth straight week as monetary policy remains exceedingly loose, settling at 77.563 Friday, its lowest close in almost nine months. Friday’s less-than-stellar U.S. employment report exacerbated worries over the U.S. economy. And following the weekend IMF summit that failed to ease tensions over a festering international ‘currency war’, the Federal Reserve is set to provide additional stimuli to the sagging economy, which is likely to weigh on the dollar and boost commodity prices even further.

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