Shurley: Cotton Market Back to Double Digits

The cotton market continues to find ways to surprise and shock and sometimes make us happy and sometimes disappoint. If it can, the market has a way of proving all analysts wrong at some point.

After trading over a dollar for the better part of the last almost eight months, prices (December futures) have taken an unfortunate late season trek into the 90s. After a nice recovery from the June and July lows, prices have now again over the past few weeks made their way back to the 90s.

Advertisement

Prices tried to stabilize around $1.02 to $1.05 and should have had support around $0.99 but blew right through that this past week, losing another 6.75 cents. Prices have now dropped 12.3 cents over the past two weeks.

The U.S. crop was increased 1.26 million bales in USDA’s September report. A 600,000-bale increase in expected exports helped soften that blow. But since then, prices have moved further down.

Additional losses have come due largely to worries and concerns about the demand side and the economy including:

Top Articles
Deere, PCT Agcloud Agreement Expands Data Options for Cotton and Grain
  • Inflation
  • Weak exports
  • COVID resurgence in China
  • Increased interest rates
  • A strong U.S. dollar
  • Losses in the U.S. stock market
  • Global economic slowdown

Focus has shifted away from the U.S. and other supply and crop concerns to economic and demand concerns.

USDA’s October crop production and supply/demand numbers will be out on Oct. 12. There are still observers, based on the “boots on the ground,” that expect the U.S. crop to decline. The September report increase was based largely on a revision up in planted acres. Some observers feel the Texas crop is still a question mark, and there are expected to be yet-to-be-realized weather related losses in both the Mid-South and Southeast.

The USDA Foreign Agricultural Service finally resumed its weekly export reports last week. Neither last week nor this week’s reports can be considered good. This week’s report (for the previous week ending Sept 15) showed good shipments but weak sales.

With economic and demand concerns already, weak export reports do further damage.

There are plenty of crop concerns and uncertainty on the supply side yet to be dealt with, including hurricanes and tropical storms.

Supply issues and a smaller U.S. crop can help gain some of the price losses back. But unless demand and economic concerns subside, we are still not likely to get back fully to where growers want this market to go for remaining 2022 crop pricing.

Further downside is possible. Look at where we were back in July. Any upside to come is likely to be tested at $1.00, then $1.05, then $1.10.

0