Monday, October 18, 2010
Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton
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Cotton saw one of its most volatile periods on record last week, driven by a rush of panic buying and then panic selling as futures soared to unprecedented heights, only to tumble limit-down late in the week. Those two old market movers—fear and greed—clearly were in play last week, only on different days, it would seem. Cotton traded to new highs three different days, only to see its biggest collapse—and widest one-day range—in years by Friday. On balance, for the week the market touched record-high prices, ranged over 1,255 points, and covered an unheard-of 993 points on Friday alone.
Trading on the ICE Futures U.S. began the week with a bang, soaring limit-up on news that India had suspended registrations of cotton for export this year, only ten days after opening the registration period. Indian traders had already registered the government’s maximum of 5.5 million bales, reflecting not only soaring foreign demand but locals’ concern that the government may hinder cotton exports again in coming months.
Following Tuesday’s consolidation and an inside day Wednesday, the market was poised for another climb and test of its all-time record high Thursday. A confluence of several factors around the world helped propel U.S. cotton futures dramatically higher this day. First, cotton on China’s Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange closed limit-up on near-record open interest, following news of mills’ unusually low cotton inventories across the country. Next, news from India further fueled this bullish fire. The country’s textile sector redoubled its calls to the government to postpone cotton exports until 2011, to the panicked dismay of importing mills across Asia. Also, disappointing economic reports in the U.S. paved the way for further quantitative easing by the Fed, dragging the dollar lower and pushing commodities higher. As a result, all 2010/11 contracts closed limit-up again. Synthetic prices for December closed at 118.87 cents/lb, setting a record high in the 140-year history of the exchange.
After gapping higher on follow-though trading, the bulls lost their appetite in early Friday action and the bears ruled the day. From the intra-day high of 119.80 cents/lb—a record—the market plummeted an astounding 993 points to settle limit down at 109.87, crashing -8.3%, the largest non-synthetic daily range ever.
In spite of Friday’s tumble, cotton futures still managed to rise for the week, up for the twelfth time in the last fifteen weeks. Several factors support this string of gains to the highest weekly close in fifteen years. Unfixed call sales stand at a record level here, and many spinners still need to buy December to fix their on-call purchases. Surging U.S. export commitments detailed here remain on a record pace, despite a modest start to shipments this marketing year. And suspicions are rising here of disappointing yields in China, hinting at more imports in coming months. Not to mention, the impact from a weaker dollar and bullish specs and funds cannot be overstated. With little fundamental history to suggest a price range for the market and constrain these volatile swings, it appears these wild fluctuations may persist, reflecting the need for a comprehensive risk management strategy to protect against the market’s peaks and swoons. To learn more about how we can help you manage this risk, please click here.
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