Cotton braces for a price breakout
Cotton braces for a price breakout

Cotton braces for a price breakout

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After trading sideways for months, fundamentals point to a potential upswing in the cotton market.

Naomi Blohm 

Since November, July 2023 cotton futures have traded in a tame, sideways trading range pattern. On the higher end of that range, is technical price resistance, near 88.00, where on the lower end, support has been at 77.00.

After taking quite a price tumble during the latter months of 2022, prices have stabilized. And when I say stabilized, I mean it – this trading range has held for an astounding seven months!

Tight U.S. supplies

The cotton market found supportive news from last week’s USDA report. On the report, the USDA lowered 2022/23 harvested acres from 7.44 to 7.31. The USDA increased yield from 947 pounds per harvested acre to 950. Due to lower harvested acres, the net result was that production for the 2022/23 crop year was reduced from 14.68 to 14.47 (million 480-pound bales).

On top of that, exports for 2022/23 increased by 400,000 bales, (from 12.2 million to 12.6 million bales). Back in December, I wrote about cotton and thought that with China opening up after Covid, we might start to see an uptick in U.S. exports of cotton. That has occurred.

The net result was a reduction in ending stocks. Ending stocks are now pegged at 3.5 million bales, down 600,000 bales from their prior month’s estimate of 4.1 million bales. Friendly!

For the new crop, 2023/24 crop year, due to a large reduction in planted acres from the year prior, and continued estimates for strong demand, ending stocks are estimated to be even lower than the 2023/24 crop year at 3.3 million bales.

Sufficient global supplies

Now, you would think the market would skyrocket on this news, however, the market remains trapped in this sideways trading pattern for now, as the USDA increased world ending stocks for 2022/23 by 600,000 bales. In April, global ending stocks were marked at 92.01, and now are marked at 92.63.

Watch global weather

Also from a global perspective, the worlds largest producers of cotton are China, India, the United States followed by Brazil. El Nino is making its way into the world, which can mean hot and dry conditions for Asia this summer.

China’s production is already anticipated to be lower than a year ago due to less planted acres (farmers switched to planting grain) and cold weather delayed planting in some areas.

In December, I also suggested that China might be okay with less planted acres of cotton, in lieu of attempting to secure more food acres. They would then rely on imports of cotton from the U.S. and Brazil. Most recently, it has been suggested that China will also be importing cotton from India.

Here in the U.S., the cotton crop is still getting planted. According to the most recent crop progress report, cotton is 35% planted, near the 5-year average of 36%.

For now, cotton futures remain in that sideways pattern, but you’ve heard me say it before – the longer a market trades in a sideways pattern, the bigger the price breakout will be down the road. Higher or lower depends on market fundamentals. Right now, things are starting to potentially shift friendlier for cotton.

Reach Naomi Blohm at 800-334-9779, on Twitter: @naomiblohm, and at naomi@totalfarmmarketing.com.


Source: farmprogress.com

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