June 15 saw China again announce 25 percent tariffs on U.S. cotton, this time to be implemented within a couple of weeks. An earlier threat of Chinese tariffs on U.S. cotton, circa April 4, would have had a much later date of implementation. Whenever they are implemented, it means that U.S. cotton imports will be more expensive than cotton from competitors like Australia or Brazil.
In the long run, I would expect the impact of Chinese tariffs to be more of a reshuffling of U.S. cotton exports, rather than a reduction. Countries like Vietnam, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and India might import more U.S. cotton than they previously would have, spin it into yarn, and ship that yarn to China duty-free.
SCARED SPECULATORS
However, the short run effect of the June 15 China tariff announcement was to apparently scare a lot of hedge fund speculators out of their long positions in ICE futures. Hence, the sharp fall from the 90s back to the 80s.
It probably didn’t help the speculators that the drought-stricken Southern Plains region received several rounds of scattered showers during the first two weeks of June.
So now what? If you hedged some expected production when ICE futures were in the 90s, that was a reasonable move.
If you can hedge some expected production now that ICE futures are back in the mid-to-lower 80s, that is also a reasonable move. I define reasonable as hedging a price floor above your costs of production, while keeping the upside open.