Monday, October 25, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


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The ‘ascent’ portion of cotton’s roller-coaster ride continued last week, with a weak dollar and global supply concerns driving the market higher. While trading on the ICE Futures U.S. was constrained to an inside weekly range, nearby December prices still jumped 984 points from last week’s finish to 119.71 cents/lb by Friday afternoon, the highest weekly close in 140 years. This latest advance marks the thirteenth higher weekly close in the last sixteen weeks. Not since another supply constraint—a northern blockade of southern commerce during the American Civil War in the 1860s—have cotton prices been as high.

Issues driving the market last week primarily came from developments in China and the U.S., together accounting for about two-fifths of global cotton production. In China, an unexpected bump in interest rates—the first since 2007—sent traders scrambling. The action could hinder textile exports from the world’s largest textile producer and help curb excessive speculation in some markets. While this bearish news normally would be likely to exert some pressure on domestic prices, fundamental support remains intact and local cotton prices are still on the rise. On balance, late-week declines in the dollar overshadowed its Tuesday rebound from the interest rate move, pulling the greenback even lower and boosting prices for a range of commodities—including cotton—even higher.

Across China, new weather concerns discussed here are dimming producers’ sentiment for yield, production, and quality across much of the country. Parts of Anhui, Shaanxi, and Xinjiang reported either cooler or wetter conditions over the last week, unwelcome news for the world’s largest cotton producer. What’s more, this weekend a new northern cold front plowed south across unpicked cotton in China, bringing more strong winds, colder temperatures, and unwelcome rains to much of China. The country’s main meteorological agency is calling for temperatures to plunge 14-16 °C shortly in Hebei, Shandong, and Jiangsu, slowing harvesting and hurting fiber quality. Already, key forecasting organizations are paring back their projections—again—for the size of this year’s China harvest.

By Friday, the market soared limit up on news of heavy overnight rain and hail across the Texas High Plains discussed here. Almost four inches of rain Thursday evening pounded fields full of beautiful pre-sold cotton, suggesting yield losses and discoloration may be in the offing for the local crop. With bolls open on virtually all the state’s cotton but the Texas harvest only one-quarter complete, the timing could not have been worse. While damage estimates are premature right now, early guesses figure 50,000 to 100,000 bales may have been lost.

The same old approach for spinning mills of buying on-call and hoping for a pullback is going wrong in the worst of ways. Conditioned by years of oversupply, temporary price spikes, and virtually no risk management, spinners outside China have been caught unprepared for the great bull market of 2010 as the balance sheet continues to tighten. While there is grumbling in the mill community about idling spindles rather than running such expensive cotton, there still is scant evidence that demand is ebbing. After the market recovered so quickly from last week’s sell-off, we see little to stop it from making new highs in the coming week. To learn more about how we can help you better manage this exposure with a comprehensive risk management strategy to protect against the market’s peaks and swoons, please click here.

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