Showing posts with label dollar index correlation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dollar index correlation. Show all posts

Monday, October 11, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


for more analysis like this, please click here.

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.

Monday, August 2, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


for more analysis like this, please click here.

Last week cotton enjoyed one of its best performances in months, as nearby prices rose to a five-week high on heightened concerns of diminishing near-term supplies and in response to a weaker dollar. In fact, every contract month closed up for the week on an improving technical and fundamental outlook, reaching multi-week highs. The October contract finished the week—and the marketing year—at 82.36 cents per pound, a 22-month high. December similarly fared well, closing higher seven of the last eight sessions before settling at 78.76 Friday afternoon, its highest daily finish in over a month.

First, the sinking value of the dollar is helping prop up a broad range of commodities, including cotton. After reaching a near-term high earlier in June, the U.S. Dollar Index—a measure of the value of the greenback relative to a basket of foreign currencies—gradually eroded, falling to 81.655 late last week, the lowest in over three months. The dollar tumbled to a new year-to-date low versus its Japanese cousin, and teeters on the verge of falling to the lowest level against the yen in fifteen years. And at 1.305, the dollar also is trading near a two and a half month low against the euro, as signs of a relatively faster rebound in Europe take hold. Should the dollar remain depressed, this is likely to support a host of commodity prices later this summer, including cotton.

Second, Traders are fretting over the very real possibility that few old-crop supplies will be available for near-term shipment before ample new-crop supplies enter the market in a few months. Certificated stocks withered further, easing to just 47,365 bales by the end of the marketing year last week, the lowest since 2004. Any late-harvested U.S. cotton is not eligible for delivery in December—one of the two most traded contracts—creating ample fear that cotton supplies available for December delivery will be extremely limited. Thus, merchants are loath to hedge against December unless they can deliver. As a result, the lingering backwardation between the October and December contracts caused by views on old-crop/new-crop supplies has spilled over into the December/July spread. While the relatively modest Dec/July inversion is not—yet—a harbinger of bearish days ahead in its own right, it may bear attention if the inversion persists and widens appreciably as December approaches expiration.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


for more analysis like this, please click here.

The cotton market continues to plumb new lows, weighed down by a soaring dollar, weaker equity markets, and the forward roll of positions by funds. Nearby cotton prices tumbled lower for the ninth straight session Friday, finishing the week at 77.06 cents per pound, the lowest daily close in almost four months. For the holiday-shortened week, Nearby prices gave up 299 points. Every contract month retreated last week, with several falling to the lowest levels in months. Different technical indicators are calling for a rebound, with momentum oscillators and the Relative Strength Index moving into oversold territory.

A key issue that continues to hinder prices in the broader commodity market is the relative strength of the dollar. The euro continues to get pounded on debt worries spreading across the continent. Europe's shared currency finished the week below $1.20 for the first time in four years, following bleak economic statements late in the week from Hungary. This drove U.S. Dollar Index futures to a fifteen-month high of 88.315, hammering commodity prices. Reflecting this weakness, the Reuters/CRB Index has collapsed over the last month, and at 248.94 is flirting with a new nine-month low. As a result, despite the most bullish old-crop fundamentals in years, cotton prices are pulled lower by weakness in commodity prices brought on by a re-strengthening dollar.

A second issue weighing on cotton prices is weakness in another key asset class, equities. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures finished the week below 10,000 for only the second time this year, dragging cotton prices lower. As the graph below shows, for the last year and a half, there has been a strong correlation between cotton prices and the Dow. But after weakening earlier this year, the co-movement has broken down during the last month, as stock prices retreated relatively faster in response to fears of a stalling global recovery.



A last issue that has hindered prices in recent days has been the roll forward of positions by funds. Long liquidation is accompanying this rolling of positions, reflected in the narrowing of the July/December inversion. After weighing on the market all year, this backwardation narrowed last week to just 165 points. The steep descent in nearby months has facilitated additional sales of certificated stocks as first notice day approaches for July. While the bears clearly have ruled trading in recent weeks, weather and its impact on crop development will dictate price with a more vocal voice for the market over the next several weeks.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


for more analysis like this, please click here.

Cotton futures retreated for the second straight week last week, erasing all of April’s gains as outside influences drove the dollar higher, roiled equity markets, and pressured most commodities lower. Nearby cotton prices fell 342 points, or -4.1% on the week to 80.71 cents per pound, burdened primarily by a soaring dollar. Last week’s strength in the greenback is a bit of a misnomer, with the true issue being relatively more weakness in the euro from default fears emanating from Greece. The euro plunged to as low as $1.26 last week—a fourteen-month low—amid concern that Greece’s debt issues could lead to a much-worse contagion across Europe, crippling the tentative recovery on the continent. Naturally, this propelled the dollar higher, with the U.S. Dollar Index breaching 85.0, its highest level in over a year. Naturally, the dollar’s rise caused massive unwinding of long commodity trades, including cotton.

These jitters spilled over into equity markets, sending stocks on a wild roller coaster week of trading with commodity markets paying close heed. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed almost 800 points on the week—its biggest plunge in years—as investors unloaded risk amid this week's chaotic experience in the markets. Euro-zone debt issues coupled with Thursday’s unprecedented—if ‘accidental’—intraday U.S. stock market plunge of almost 1,000 points left investors in no mood for additional risk exposure in equities or commodities, with many flocking to the relatively safe havens of gold and the dollar.

This ‘flight to safety’ drove prices for many commodities lower, dragging cotton prices down in step. The nineteen-commodity Reuters/Jefferies CRB index plunged nearly 6%, the biggest weekly fall since 2008. All major components of the Index except livestock posted steep losses on the week, reflecting the broad-based risk aversion. Regardless of any internal fundamental drivers impacting the cotton market last week, cotton was swept up in the broader-market decline.

Looking ahead, the coming week holds the potential for a rebound for cotton. The market’s first peek at new-crop fundamentals from the USDA Tuesday is likely to suggest continued tightness in the balance sheet, if somewhat looser than this marketing year. Analysts’ forecasts—including our own here—point to a larger crop size in 2010/11, but an offsetting jump in demand for U.S. cotton as well. Also, anecdotal evidence indicates that last week’s swoon in prices prompted Chinese mills to become active buyers, suggesting robust export sales are forthcoming. And the weekend announcement of a Greek rescue package worth almost $1 trillion from the EU is likely to assuage fears of an imminent default, lifting spirits and easing risk aversion somewhat. This news could partially offset last week’s decline in the euro and prompt a modest rebound in commodities in coming days, including cotton.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


for more analysis like this, please click here.

Cotton prices managed to rebound last week, in spite of mounting bearish evidence hinting at the increased potential for a pullback. Viewed from the bulls’ perspective, cotton’s climb last week came on news of higher unfixed on-call sales and the biggest U.S. cotton exports in nine months. The CFTC’s latest Cotton on Call report indicates unfixed on-call sales are growing at a rapid pace, particularly in the July contract. Total unfixed on-call sales merchants made to textile mills jumped to 68,829 contracts, the highest in two years, supporting higher ICE futures. The July contract rose by 816 contracts to a record 23,159. There are only 11,713 unfixed on-call purchases merchants have made from growers, providing very little in the way of an “offset”. As mills continue to add to their on-call position, it represents more futures that will need to be bought during a smaller window of time, suggesting higher prices are likely.



The bulls also point to the latest report of robust sales and shipments abroad for cotton. Total exports of Upland and Pima cotton reached 312,661 480-lb. bales in the week ending March 11, driven by soaring volume to America’s largest market. Exports destined for Chinese textile mills surged to 152,268 bales, the highest level so far this marketing year. In fact, this weekly volume was almost as much as the U.S. shipped to all other markets combined, reflecting China’s expanding share of total U.S. cotton exports over the last several months. The surging shipments to China in recent weeks echo our observation here of rapid growth in total Chinese cotton imports and suggest cumulative U.S. exports to China this marketing year may climb to the second-highest level ever recorded, something certainly bullish for price.

But from a stronger dollar to higher acreage forecasts for spring plantings, different bearish indicators are looming and likely to offset much of the enthusiasm for higher prices in coming weeks. Greece’s ongoing debt problems led to a weaker euro and stronger dollar last week, limiting gains on commodities. The U.S. Dollar Index finished the week higher at 80.7, rivaling its highest level in 21 months and hindering gains across a variety of commodities.

Finally, some price impacts may be coming from excellent topsoil moisture reports across the South and private acreage estimates released last week. One planted acreage report disseminated last week pegged spring U.S. cotton plantings at 10.3 million acres, well up from a year earlier. The market is likely to trend sideways in coming days, in anticipation of the March 31 Prospective Plantings report from the USDA. While the market looks for an increase in cotton acres this spring, the question is how much. Certainly, weather in coming months will impact yields—something difficult to accurately gauge this early in the year—but one early hint at the potential for better-than-average yields is ample topsoil moisture. The latest nationwide map here shows much of the South is wetter than normal, with no cotton acres reported as abnormally dry. This early sign hints that the surge in price over the last year may slow in coming weeks under the weight of a much larger cotton crop.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


for more analysis like this, please click here.

After again largely ignoring fundamentals internal to the cotton market, cotton futures prices retreated for the fifth straight week, succumbing to the overarching bearish influence of a stronger dollar. The Nearby price on the ICE Futures U.S. exchange plunged 241 points from the previous week to 66.62 cents per pound, a two-month low. This weighed on every subsequent contract month, dragging each lower again, down for every week in 2010. While the week did produce some bullish news for cotton, the dollar remains the key drag on the market.

The bulls took little comfort in robust export sales and further evidence of a smaller Indian crop last week. Net upland sales jumped to a marketing-year high of 519,500 running bales, particularly driven by big volume to China. Weekly shipments also improved, reaching almost 250,000 bales, the second-highest point so far in 2009/10. Exports to mid-tier markets like Mexico, Thailand, and Peru also climbed to marketing-year highs, and market sentiment suggests shipments in coming days are also likely to remain strong.

More voices are adding to the cacophony of suspicion that India’s harvest size is overstated, echoing our long-held argument here. Most recently, the Cotton Association of India pegged the harvest size lower from their earlier forecasts at just 30.2 million bales (170kg), down half a million bales from their previous forecast just over two months ago. We would not be surprised to see forecasts ease even lower in coming months, heartening the bulls’ position.

In spite of these signals of tighter fundamentals last week, the dollar remains the 800-pound gorilla weighing on commodity markets, including cotton. Signs of debt troubles in several European markets are sinking the euro, driving the greenback higher and dragging commodity prices lower. After reaching a fourteen-month high earlier this year, the Reuters/CRB Index is down 35 points to 258.55, a three-month low. Cotton prices are lower in concert with the collapse in the broader index. If the lack of concrete proposals to the European debt concerns from this weekend’s G-7 meeting is any guide, the euro may remain under pressure in coming weeks, implying commodity prices—including cotton prices—also may struggle to post a sustained rebound in the near term.



Looking ahead, our estimates for changes to the forthcoming USDA WASDE forecasts portend tighter domestic markets for the current marketing year:

-U.S. production for 2009/2010: We see the USDA easing its production forecast for the fourth time in five months, down to 12.25 million bales. The volume of ginning and classing of this season's crop here and here remains behind this point last year, hinting that the anticipated harvest size will contract further. In fact, we would not be surprised to see the final crop size even lower—closer to 12.1 million—but we look for the USDA to make only another incremental step in that direction in its February report.

-U.S. exports for 2009/2010: We look for the USDA to revise its export forecast higher again in February, to 11.15 million bales. Already, this moving target has been revised 800,000 bales higher over the last five months, and particularly in light of robust export reports in recent weeks, we anticipate the actual level to be higher than the current 11.0 million-bale forecast.

-Ending stocks for 2009/2010: With a 150,000-bale increase in the harvest size, a 150,000-bale increase in exports, and no presumed change in mill use, ending stocks are likely to ease by 300,000 bales from January's 4.3 million bales to 4.0 million. If so, this would mark the fifth straight month of gradually lower ending stocks. Coupled with higher demand, the lower ending stocks imply a tighter anticipated stocks-to-use ratio for 2009/10, friendly to higher prices. As a result, we look for the market to grapple in coming weeks with the opposing prospects of tighter ending stocks in 2009/10 versus the heavy influence of a stronger dollar.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton


for more analysis like this, please click here.

A barrage of bearish data weighed on cotton prices last week, dragging U.S. and Chinese markets lower into an overdue correction, consolidating and setting the stage before prices resume their gradual march higher this winter. Following a move to new highs early last week, cotton prices on the ICE Futures U.S. tumbled three of the next four days, finishing Friday at 72.44 cents per pound, the lowest level in seven weeks. Several issues together pulled prices lower on the week, including prospects for looser anticipated global fundamentals on Tuesday’s WASDE report, rumors of fund balancing, lower Chinese futures prices, and the Chinese central bank’s raising of interest rates.

First, market sentiment points to higher global cotton production forecasts when the USDA releases its next WASDE report Tuesday morning, boosting anticipated carryover stocks. Here, beneficial rains across the eastern third of Australia over the last half month continue to ease crop concerns from just a few months ago. While the crop there still needs ample moisture during the crucial February fruiting period, ample December and January showers dramatically boosted yield prospects for one of the world’s leading cotton exporters. Similarly, excellent crop conditions across much of the Brazilian cotton belt here are helping improve harvest prospects in the Southern Hemisphere’s largest producer this year. Additionally, the latest data on the robust pace of cotton arrivals in Pakistan here continue to support our long-held view that production forecasts in this market remain too conservative. Together, should these harvest sizes be revised higher as we anticipate, the increase in global supply could temper much of the near-term enthusiasm for continued price gains.

A second issue that weighed on cotton prices last week was rumors of fund rebalancing and a rebound in the dollar. According to the CFTC Commitments of Traders Report, for the week ending January 5th, index funds were net sellers of only 123 contracts, which reduced their net long position to 80,336 contracts. Hedge funds, however, were more aggressive sellers, decreasing their net long position by 4,423 contracts to stand at 41,032. But several market watchers see this as profit-taking by long-only funds, and not an indication that index funds are any less bullish.

The dollar also dragged on many commodities last week, including cotton. In the first full week of trading in the New Year, the U.S. Dollar Index rebounded to 77.655, a three-week high. But Friday’s disappointing jobs report and higher oil prices are likely to temper gains in the greenback in coming days, improving the near-term outlook for cotton.

Lastly, U.S. futures prices were heavily influenced by China’s impact on the market. Plummeting cotton prices on China’s Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange (ZCE) dragged U.S. prices lower. The most-traded May contract on the ZCE fell 570 yuan per ton last week (3.8 cents per pound) on plunging volume and open interest, the biggest weekly drop in months. The drop in futures came as The People's Bank of China Thursday raised the interest rate on its three-month treasury bills for the first time since this summer, stoking fears that Beijing could start tightening monetary policy in the coming months. Market perception is that as the Chinese attempt to gently slow economic growth and head off inflation, consumption of raw materials will slow. This policy shift reverberated across cotton markets around the world, driving prices lower.

While we acknowledge the overdue need for this corrective consolidation in prices, we continue to expect prices to continue to move sideways to higher over the next few weeks, which will likely prompt a modest increase in U.S. cotton plantings in the spring.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Are ICE and ZCE Cotton Futures Poised to Strengthen Further in Second Half of 2009/10?

for more analysis like this, please click here.

After the unprecedented spike in global cotton prices witnessed in 2008 and the resultant shockwaves felt thereafter across the global cotton market, prices in 2009 returned to levels more in line with traditional influences. These drivers include factors internal and external to the cotton market, and show strong correlations to futures prices. Looking ahead to 2010, these signals suggest cotton prices are likely to remain firm, above their long-term average level, as the global economy re-accelerates from a tumultuous 2008, driving renewed growth aggregate demand for cotton textiles and apparel.

Perhaps one of the most influential drivers on global and U.S. cotton prices is fundamental analysis. The study of the ebb, flow and interaction of supply and demand yields insight into current price levels and can hint at the future direction of price. A measure of this interaction, the stocks-to-use ratio, is often strongly correlated with price. More specifically, the tighter or looser the ratio between anticipated ending stocks and expected demand changes, the higher or lower we can expect price to trend. This relationship is evident in the graph below, showing that in recent months, the forecasted stocks-to-use ratio for the U.S. cotton market has fallen, or tightened. As this has occurred, the monthly average futures price has risen in tandem, breaching 70 cents per pound over the first few days in December.

Analysis of the stocks-to-use ratio can yield important clues to the future direction of price. For example, the USDA’s November forecasted stocks-to-use ratio for the 2009/10 marketing year is 35.2%, the smallest ratio in fourteen months. Not coincidentally, November’s average prices for nearby cotton on ICE Futures U.S. were 68.73 cents per pound, the highest in fifteen months. Reports of likely changes in supply and demand can cause this anticipated ratio to rise or fall, in turn driving price lower or higher in tandem.

Looking ahead to 2010, we expect the U.S. stocks-to-use ratio to tighten further in coming months, suggesting price could strengthen even further. We base our forecast on prospects that the U.S. harvest size may be smaller than currently projected, and on the belief that U.S. exports may outpace the current target in the remaining months of this marketing year. Certainly, this bullish outlook is tempered by the notion that prices already outpace the level suggested by this historic relationship. This implies that any continued appreciation in futures prices may not be commensurate with continued declines in the stocks-to-use ratio. Regardless, we look for the market to remain firm well through winter, perhaps until attention turns to the outlook for higher cotton plantings again in the spring.

Looking more broadly across the U.S. economy, factors external to the cotton market are also having a strong influence over cotton prices. First, the weaker U.S. dollar is boosting the outlook for a host of exportable commodities, including cotton. Both the dollar and cotton prices moved in lock-step over the last two years and presently stand near levels not seen in sixteen months. The outlook for the dollar in 2010 is dependent upon myriad factors both in the U.S. and abroad, including the outlook for interest rates, capital markets, inflation, government policies, and other economic indicators. While it remains impossible to accurately forecast the value of the dollar, we, along with many other market observers, remain pessimistic on the prospects for the greenback, helping support the outlook for a range of commodity prices, including cotton.


Second, speaking of capital markets, cotton prices have had an uncanny correlation with equity prices in the U.S. recently. As darkening clouds over the U.S. economy grew more ominous in the final months of 2007, stock markets in the U.S. began a hasty retreat as investors moved money to safer investments. After peaking in October 2007, the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost more than half its value over the next year and a half, falling to its lowest level in a dozen years. Since then, the Dow has posted one of its biggest rebounds in history, soaring roughly 50% from its March 2009 low. The Dow now sits near its highest level in fourteen months. Similarly, after spiking to the highest level in years in early 2008, cotton futures prices plunged more than 60% over the next eight months to 39.14 cents per pound, the lowest level in more than six years. Since then, nearby cotton prices have steadily climbed, surpassing 70 cents for the first time in sixteen months. Similar to gauging the value of the dollar, forecasting stock prices naturally is next to impossible. But many analysts agree that the impressive jump in the Dow in 2009 is unlikely to be duplicated in 2010, suggesting that any continued re-strengthening in cotton prices is likely to come at a slower rate than witnessed this year.
Aside from fluctuations in cotton supply and demand and factors external to the cotton market, the sales of merchants and positions of large traders and funds in the market continue to be strongly correlated to cotton prices. Week-to-week on-call sales across all contract months continue their co-movement with nearby cotton futures over the last two years. In fact, less than two months ago unfixed call sales reached 54,135 contracts—their highest level in fourteen months—at the same time that weekly nearby prices surpassed 68 cents, the highest level in sixteen months. In the weeks since, a gap opened between the two measures. But we look for this divergence to narrow in coming months, whether in the form of lower cotton prices or higher unfixed call sales. Given the bullish other factors noted earlier, we are more confident that unfixed call sales will slowly expand to fill that gap.


The role of hedge and index funds is likely to remain integral to commodity prices—including cotton—well into 2010. The increasing prevalence of long-only commodity indexes and the increasing acceptance of commodities as an asset class are helping drive interest—and therefore volume—in this area, boosting prices. Likewise, the prominence of agricultural commodities in these indexes has substantially increased in recent years. The cotton market has enjoyed a relatively consistent share of the surge of index and hedge fund monies into the market over the last two years, supporting price. In fact, for well over two years, the ebb and flow of index funds’ net positions have mirrored the rise and fall of cotton prices. Just as the net position of index funds is hovering near a fourteen-month high, so too are cotton prices. Looking ahead, aside from political wrangling over new bills governing increased transparency for some larger market participants, we see little reason to expect the inflow of hedge and index funds to ease in 2010, supporting an outlook for robust price in the months ahead.

Lastly, we turn away from the U.S. futures market to the impressive performance of cotton on the Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange. Since commencing trading on the ZCE over five years ago, cotton futures prices have trended in step with their American counterparts, reflecting efficient market-clearing and price-discovery mechanisms in place in both markets. Clearly, the issues that impact price in one market are felt half a world away, driving price in the other market.

This relationship has been particularly evident over the last year, when prices on both the ICE Futures U.S. and the ZCE exchanges reached near-term lows on virtually the same day. Since then, nearby prices on both exchanges have risen in step with one another to the highest levels in roughly fourteen months. It is only over the last month that ZCE cotton prices continued to climb, far outpacing gains on the ICE and peaking recently at record levels just as market volume also soared to more than 500,000 contracts, also a record. This surge in price easily outpaces gains in downstream intermediate yarns and fabrics and appears inherently inflationary—and therefore unsustainable. While we are optimistic on the prospects for continued strength in global cotton prices into 2010, we are not as confident ZCE prices will be able to maintain such a premium. We expect that any continued gains in ICE futures prices are unlikely to be met with commensurate increases in ZCE prices. And should this sudden spike in ZCE volume and open interest suddenly plunge, we would expect Nearby prices in China to retreat closer in line with U.S. futures prices in coming months.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton

Unfolding events last week generally were friendly to the market, helping nearby cotton futures reach the highest daily close in fourteen months, before a collapse in technicals settled the week’s activity with little net change from the previous week. The remnants of Hurricane Ida drenched open-boll cotton from Alabama to Virginia last week, with pockets receiving up to eight inches of rain in hardly 48 hours. In particular, the North Carolina crop, which had been expecting record yields prior to the arrival of the storm, roughly 330,000 potential bales of cotton still on the stalk in the state were exposed to excessive rainfall, strongly suggesting quality may be seriously compromised as a result. Gusty winds later in the week then blew much of the heavy, soaked bolls to the ground, where they are unable to be harvested, implying yields in the state also may suffer.

Tuesday’s release of new supply/demand forecasts from the USDA generally mirrored our forecasts here, showing an outlook for tighter fundamentals, both in the U.S. and worldwide. A 502,000-bale decline from just last month in the anticipated size of the U.S. crop is likely to result in the smallest harvest in two decades. Similarly, the USDA shaved another million bales off the size of the Chinese crop for the second straight month, while historic revisions to Bangladeshi cotton consumption propelled mill demand there to a record 4.0 million bales this year. On balance, lower production and higher demand reduced projected ending stocks from last month both in the U.S. and worldwide, resulting in tighter stocks-to-use ratios, fundamentals friendly to prices. Accordingly, nearby futures closed Tuesday at 75.11 cents per pound, matching the highest close since August 2008.

Technical trading ruled later in the week, with cotton receiving little, if any, assistance from outside markets. Nearby futures moved in mirror-opposite step to the dollar each of the last nine sessions, and settled lower in the second half of the week as the dollar rebounded off fourteen-month lows. After climbing to a fourteen-month high in late October and establishing firm resistance, cotton prices remain constrained to a three-hundred point trading channel over the last few weeks. In the shorter term, we look for the market to take a second look at support levels at 69.75 and 68.80 cents per pound before challenging Tuesday’s fourteen-month high of 74.27 cents in the longer term.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton

After climbing five of the last seven weeks to the highest level in fourteen months, nearby cotton prices stayed range-bound last week within the limits set last Monday as traders wrestled with an outlook for both lower supply and demand. After dropping 174 points last Monday from the prior week’s close, futures prices spent the week within a 250-point range as harvest concerns in several markets weighed against news of lower demand for U.S. cotton. Too much rain in Mid-South states here continues to plague production prospects in the region, delaying harvesting to the latest in history. With each passing day, the outlook for cotton yield and quality are eroding in the region. While low temperatures have remained above freezing in most of the south, prospects for the crop will dim rapidly once wintry conditions set in.

Similarly, inclement harvest weather in China is calling into question earlier optimistic forecasts for the crop size. In China’s Xinjiang province, freezing temperatures and the first snowfall of the season here are accelerating picking before harsher conditions set in. Also recently the China Cotton Association drastically reduced its anticipated harvest size by 2.5 million bales from the previous month’s forecast to 30.8 million bales, with Xinjiang production down 14-15% from last year, leading the decline.

Demand issues also weighed on the market, helping temper the streak of bullishness over recent weeks. U.S. mill consumption in September fell to a record-low 2.9 million annualized bales here, well below the latest USDA forecast for 2009/10 of 3.4 million bales. And weekly export sales and shipments fell to a marketing year low for the week ending October 15, suggesting cumulative shipments in 2009/10 remain behind the pace necessary to reach the latest forecast.

News of lower supply and demand last week worked to offset one another, leaving prices to trade within Monday’s range all week. By Friday, futures closed 83 points lower from the week before at 67.38 cents per pound. The weekly Spec/Hedge report showed that the spec long position grew to 18.5%, up 4.1 percentage points from the previous week. As the spec long position grows, so has open interest in cotton futures. By the close of business Thursday, open interest had risen to 180,635 contracts, strongly suggesting money is flowing into the cotton market.

Looking ahead, data on home sales, consumer spending, and a first look at third-quarter GDP will set the tone for economic releases for the week. After seeing the dollar plunge to a fourteen-month low last week, these data coupled with new retail sales data and an interest rate decision in Japan are sure to sway the greenback in coming days, with most commodities—including cotton—sure to respond in kind.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Weekly Commodity Market Recap: Cotton

After retreating for three straight weeks, cotton prices managed to post a modest rebound last week, buoyed by a weaker dollar and indications that consumers might be set to start shopping again as the holidays approach. But supply-side pressures on the crops in major producers may limit this bullish sentiment in coming days as the market awaits the newest crop report from the USDA later this week.
Cotton prices extended their gains late last week on the back of a weaker dollar. Since finishing last week near the low end of its recent trading range, Nearby cotton futures are up six of the last seven sessions, closing last week at 57.53 cents per pound. Despite losses last week in grains, a declining dollar continues to support cotton prices. The greenback slid for the seventh time in nine weeks, threatening to fall to its lowest level in a year. The Dollar Index on ICE Futures U.S. eased to 78.14 Friday as equity markets rose on speculation the global recession is easing, sapping demand for the currency as a haven. Cotton prices’ negative correlation against fluctuations in the dollar has been particularly impressive over the last year and a half, hinting that if this relationship persists, there may be more upside potential for cotton in coming weeks.



Adding to this bullish support are indications that consumers might be preparing to start shopping again, just in time for the holiday shopping season. Although sales were down again in August at most U.S. apparel retailers here and the unemployment rate rose to a 26-year high here, they were not as bad as expected, putting some tentative hope in the market. However, we are not as optimistic, and look for same-store sales at most clothing retailers to continue to post losses—albeit at a slower rate—in coming months, with comps roughly flat by Christmas.
On the supply side, the market is still waiting for a better indication of this year's crop in the world’s largest cotton-producing markets. The U.S., India, and China each have had some challenges this year, but have managed to wriggle through them without noticeably large problems resulting. South Texas cotton remains parched, with total agricultural losses in the state here approaching a record $4.1 billion. Some eastern provinces in China saw damaging wind and rain from Typhoon Morakot here. And India received unimpressive monsoonal rains earlier this summer, only to enjoy late-season onset of ample precipitation here. However, the stress put on these crops, mostly due to swings back and forth from very dry to very wet conditions, could end up causing lower yields. Traders will likely be hesitant to carry prices strongly higher or lower until they get a better idea of the crop size in the latest USDA report due at the end of the week.