RUSH AFTER HURRICANES DAMAGE AMERICAN CROPS
THE world’s top cotton buyers, all in Asia, are flocking to India to secure supplies after fierce storms in the US, the biggest exporter of the fibre, affected the size and quality of the crop, dealers said.
In the past week alone, India, the world’s second-biggest cotton exporter, sealed deals to sell about a million bales to China, Taiwan, Vietnam, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Indonesia – key garment suppliers to brands such as H&M, Inditex-owned Zara and Wal-Mart Stores Inc.
That compared with 300,000 bales in the two weeks before. Dealers expect contracts similar to last week in the next few months, which could help India’s exports grow by a quarter in the 2017/18 season beginning October.
“Indian cotton has great chances this year,” said Chirag Patel, chief executive at Jaydeep Cotton Fibers Pvt Ltd, a leading exporter. Asian “buyers are switching to Indian cotton from the US”.
Hurricanes Harvey and Irma caused widespread damage to the crop in Texas and Georgia,
major cotton producing states, with the effects more widespread in Texas, dealers said.
“We definitely lost cotton in Texas. It wiped out 500,000-600,000 bales,” said Peter Egli, risk manager at Plexus Cotton Ltd, a Chicago-based merchant, referring to the impact of Harvey in the top-producing US state.
In 2016, the United States exported 86 per cent of its cotton, 69 per cent of which went to Asia, according to the US Department of Agriculture.
Other cotton producers like Brazil and Australia could benefit from lower supplies from the United States, but may find it difficult to match the price offered by India, where a bumper harvest is likely to keep the rates lower.
Traders in India, also the world’s biggest cotton producer, signed their export deals at around 80 cents per lb on a cost and freight basis, nearly two cents lower than the supplies from the US, dealers have said.
India could soon sell at lower prices. Farmers are likely to harvest a record 40 million bales of cotton in the 2017/18 season beginning October 1, 2017, bringing domestic prices down and making exports even more competitive, Patel explained.
For the new 2017/18 season, farmers have planted 12.1 million hectares with cotton, up 19 per cent from a year earlier, farm ministry data showed.
India harvested 34.5 million bales of cotton in the 2016/17 season.
Favourable crop conditions would help India sell 7.5 million bales of cotton on the world market in 2017/18 against six million bales in the previous year, said Nayan Mirani, partner at Khimji Visram & Sons, a leading cotton exporter.
Some traders believe that India’s exports could surpass eight million bales if China, the world’s biggest cotton consumer, steps up imports in 2017/18.
Beijing, which began selling cotton from its reserves on March 6, had planned to stop the daily auctions at the end of August. But it extended the sales for an additional month after local prices rose amid tighter supply, indicating the need to replenish falling inventories.
A Mumbai-based dealer with a global trading firm company said he had received a flurry of orders in the past few weeks, especially for December quarter shipments. He declined to be identified because he was not authorised to talk to the media.
Hobbled by the rising rupee and unattractive global prices, India was struggling to sign export deals until a few weeks ago. But a recent rally in global prices made overseas sales more competitive.
Other than attractive prices, close proximity encouraged most Asian buyers to turn to India. While cargoes from the United States take about 50 days to reach Vietnam, Bangladesh and Pakistan, India can ship its cotton in two weeks.
India’s new season crop will be available to buyers from October, but the supplies from the US will reach consumers only in January, said Mirani of Khimji Visram, a top exporter.
The US Department of Agriculture this week said American cotton output is seen at 21.76 million bales for 2017/18 compared with 20.55 million bales projected last month. (Reuters)