Cotton Falls From 30-Month High On Speculative Selling

By Debarati Roy

Bloomberg

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Cotton prices dropped from a 30- month high in New York amid signs of speculative selling.

The second-biggest bet for cotton-options trading is for prices to fall to 75 cents by December, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Late last week, cotton rose to 87.3 cents a pound, the highest level since March 6, 2008, on concern that global supplies continue to lag behind demand.

“Option-related selling took prices into new lows for the day,” said Mike Stevens, an independent trader in Mandeville, Louisiana. “The fundamental story remains intact.”

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Cotton for December delivery fell 0.08 cent, or 0.1 percent, to settle at 86.07 cents at 2:33 p.m. on ICE Futures U.S. in New York. The fiber climbed 3 percent this week and has advanced 49 percent in the past year on forecasts for use to exceed production.

Consumption will increase to 25.715 million metric tons from 24.934 million a year earlier, the Birkenhead, England- based researcher said today in an e-mailed report.

China, the world’s biggest consumer, sold all 14,143 metric tons of cotton offered today from state reserves at an auction, the nation’s cotton association said in a statement, a sign of rising domestic demand.
 

(Story found in original format here.)

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