Market Catching Its Breath After 10-Day Slide

After an unprecedented 10-day drop in prices, December cotton prices scratched out a higher close at week’s end. Lower prices had been expected, but only down to 67.00-67.50 cents in the near term. The historical rule suggests a 6-day drop is possible, but not the 10 day-collapse the market suffered.

More and more trading rules are changes. The December contract fell to 66.17 before finding enough support to fight for a higher close. The two week fall did not appear to be supported by fundamentals, so where was the culprit?

Advertisement

Plantings and even early crop development favor a big crop and lower prices, but production hot spots have been well recorded. Much of Texas needs moisture, and the Mid-South needs a lifeguard. The West needs air conditioning, but that crop is not pollinating yet, so potentially the heat will not be a significant issue. Parts of the Southeast will go under water over the weekend, but that crop could still rebound with record yields.

With July 4 still nearly two weeks away, the Mid-South also has time to post a record yield. The same can be said for Texas and the potential million dollar rain that could hit in the next six days. Thus, Mother Nature will prove to be the major soothsayer as to whether December can be pulled back up to 73 cents or if prices will be pushed down to near 60 cents.

Fundamentals, take a look at export sales! By all rights, the market should have shot higher on the week. Net upland sales on the week totaled a very strong 167,500 RB, with Vietnam (108,300 RB) and China (28,200 RB) being the leading buyers. Pima sales totaled 9,500 RB. However, sales for 2017-18 delivery exploded to 475,300 RB, comprised of 426,800 RB of upland and 48,500 RB of Pima. Thus, all sales on the week exceeded 600,000 bales, and still the market fell by triple digits.

Top Articles
Make a Pre-Planting Checklist

Again, fundamentals were not the culprit, although there are bearish fundamentals in the mix. We tweeted a couple of weeks ago that the speculative funds were exiting the market, and their withdrawal has continued. In fact, the commitment of traders report suggests fund liquidation has been more aggressive than expected, and therein lies the culprit.

Funds have just pulled out of cotton. They had a magnificent run, and cotton was their star for much of the year, outperforming both the grains and metals. Boosted by the now solved on-call sales dilemma, exceptionally strong U.S. export sales, and China and India’s appetite for U.S. cotton, the cotton market simply outperformed most other markets. Yet today, faced with minimal economic inflation and a larger world crop, fund managers have pulled their cash out of market, parked it in liquid accounts and moved to the sidelines to wait for their next market play.

Additionally, this week saw strong algorithmic trading taking prices lower. The combined action by these two sets of traders totally took the breath out of the cotton market. Thus, the market is trying to catch its breath and adjust to the void of the needed speculative open interest.

Prices are consolidating and waiting for the next fundamental to provide leadership. Exports will continue to be a key, but again, Mother Nature will be the only game in town for the next two-to-four week span. Export sales to China have been underestimated simply due to most not anticipating that China must have high quality cottons (U.S., Australian and Brazilian) to mix with their National Reserve Stocks that are now mostly mid to low grades.

U.S. export sales will continue to outperform most all prior years. We previously addressed the competitive price and quality advantage that 2017-18 marketing year export sales have enjoyed. Export sales for the 2017-18 marketing year are the second highest – at this time of year – of the past 30 years, outpaced only by the record established in 2011. With the exception of India, most countries will purchase nearly as much cotton from the U.S, if not more, as they did during the 2016-17 marketing year.

Certainly abandonment in the Southwest is always a major price factor. There are definite trouble spots, but it remains some two weeks too early to kill that crop, and the market is telling us that. It is not unusual for the market to kill the crop a couple of times early in the growing season. Thus, we will revisit the Southwest – and in particular District 1S – before after the second week in July.

With only 26 more shopping Fridays until Christmas, remember…give a gift of cotton today.

0