Shurley on Cotton: Analyzing the 2018 Cotton Outlook
Shurley on Cotton: Analyzing the 2018 Cotton Outlook

Shurley on Cotton: Analyzing the 2018 Cotton Outlook

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By Dr. Don Shurley

On June 14, I had the pleasure and honor to present for the University of Arkansas Extension Service as part of their Food and Agribusiness Webinar Series. Thanks to my long-time colleague and friend Dr. Bobby Coats for the invitation and opportunity.

Following are a few of the comments from that presentation.

There are several factors influencing cotton prices. All have been discussed and are well-known within industry. Specifically, the uncertainty surrounding acreage and the condition of the U.S. crop, questions also about foreign production, and improving demand/use and strong U.S. exports. Let’s briefly look further at each of these and related issues.

Planting

When you look at the total crop, planting progress has been on average or ahead of normal pretty much all season. But this is misleading and not a good indicator of the situation. Texas has been very dry, and some of that crop was dusted in just to meet the crop insurance deadline. The Southeast was delayed due to wet conditions and, again, growers rushed to try to get the crop planted into June. Georgia has been 6 to 12 percentage points behind normal for the past few weeks.

Condition

The Texas crop is 31% poor or very poor; the Oklahoma crop 22%. The Mid-South and Southeast crops are in mostly fair to good condition. When you combine the planting situation in Texas with this crop condition, it does not bode well unless things make a dramatic turn-around. This is what the market has been reacting to.

Drought maps compare last week to a month earlier. The Texas- Oklahoma situation has improved, but only slightly. The Southeast has improved, but too much rain has hampered some of the crop and crop activities in Georgia.

USDA Monthly Estimates—U.S. Crop

The June 12 USDA crop production report pegs the 2018 crop at 19.5 million bales with a yield of 841 lbs – the same as the initial estimate in May. This is a bit of a surprise given the condition of the crop. We’ll discuss in a little more detail later, but exports for the 2017 crop were revised up for the second straight month, and this further reduces the carry-in to the 2018 crop year on Aug 1.

Uncertain Foreign Production

The 2018 Chinese crop is expected to be 26½ million bales – 500,000 bales less than the May estimate and 1 million bales less than last year. Some believe the crop may be less than this. With use doing well, this is going to increase the need for imports and/or more use of their stocks. I saw a recent announcement that China will increase their import quota by 800,000 tons – which, if my math is correct, would be an over 3 million bale increase.

The 2018 India crop is projected the same as this past year, but this too could be questionable. I read a story just this week about how Indian growers are using unapproved Monsanto seed. With world use/demand expected to grow, any hiccup in India production could reduce their exports and put more pressure on the U.S. crop and U.S. exports.

Improving Use – World Monthly Estimates

World use for the 2018 crop year is projected at over 125 million bales. If realized, this would be a record use and 3.8% growth from this season. Use for the 2017 crop year is now projected at almost 121 million bales, which is 5.2% above 2016.

World Production, Use and Ending Stocks

For the 2018 crop year, use is expected to exceed production by almost 5 million bales. Stocks will continue to decline, and, while still higher than 10 years ago, stocks are now approaching “pre-buildup” levels. In fact, if you consider the improvement in use, the projected stocks-to-use ratio is 66%, which would still be higher but approaching “pre-buildup” years. In some respect, the level of world stocks is largely irrelevant anyway due to China’s policies. We know most of that stockpile is not currently in the pipeline.

Use by Country

Since the low in 2011, the rebound in use has been evidenced in China, but most notable in relatively new and expanding markets like Vietnam and Bangladesh. Use in India has not grown and been stable in recent years. Increased focus has been on exports, but their exports depend on production and stocks. Mills in these seven countries account for 86% of total world use.

Export Sales and Shipments

Looking at the most recent weekly export report numbers, sales have fallen off, and this could be due to higher prices. As of May 31, sales totaled 17.4 million bales. Shipments have been very strong and, as of May 31, totaled 12.9 million bales. Shipments need to average about 365,000 bales per week to meet USDA’s new 16 million bale estimate. This certainly seems doable based on recent pace.

(UPDATE: For the week ending June 7, sales were 44,000 bales and shipments 483,000 bales. This brings total shipments to 13.3 million bales – 83% of the projection for the marketing year.)

Top Customers

As of May 31, shipments were 80.4% of the new USDA projection. This is right in line with last season at this same time. Sales for the 2018 crop already total 4.8 million bales. Top customers (country of destination) for the 2017 crop include Vietnam, China, Turkey, Indonesia and Pakistan. This is based on sales, not actual shipments to date.

Tariff Issue

The U.S.-China tariff situation remains uncertain. A tariff imposed on raw cotton imports would raise the cost of U.S. cotton to Chinese mills. Should this result in less demand for U.S. cotton, it could hurt prices in the short term, but ultimately would likely only result in increased U.S. exports to other countries or a “shuffle” in exports.

The market certainly doesn’t seem overly concerned at the moment about the impact of any tariff. As mentioned previously, China has announced an increase in import quota.

China Production, Use and Ending Stocks

The world supply/demand picture has improved dramatically over just the past several years. This can be evidenced in part by looking at the China situation. China has reduced its stocks by 38% since the peak in 2014-15. Stocks are projected to decline another 8 million bales for the 2018 crop marketing year.

China’s cotton production has always been less than its use. Its mills rely on imports and stocks to supply the difference. With demand/use improving in combination with lower production, this has created what I have called the “China Gap,” and this difference between use and production is widening.

Outlook

New crop December futures prices are in the low 90s. It is the role of the futures market to take all that we know – or think we know – and determine what the price (of cotton, in our case) should be at some future point in time. The market at 90 cents has factored in what we have discussed. But there are still uncertainties that will be played out in the weeks and months ahead. This uncertainty should keep the market well supported.

I can draw you a number of scenarios that could play out, and each would impact price in a different way. If the U.S. crop eventually comes in less than the current estimate, if the China and India crops are smaller than expected, and provided use/demand remains strong, this should keep prices strong.

(UPDATE: On June 15, December futures closed below 90 cents – down over 3 cents for the day. Traders and news sources cited escalating trade tensions between the U.S. and China as reason for the decline.)

Prices (December futures) have trended up since November. The real “break out” came at around 80 to 82 cents. This should be a good level for support. I’m not saying prices are headed south – just saying if weakness develops, around 82 should be the floor.

Given all the factors we have discussed, as we move forward, 90 to 95 cents or higher is my optimistic outlook; 75 to 85 cents is the pessimistic outlook.

Marketing Comments

I believe many (maybe most) producers are at least one-third priced on their 2018 expected production. Their decisions likely started at around 72 to 75 cents December futures and have scaled up from there as prices have improved.

If not already and if I were a grower, I’d move to at least 50% – maybe 60% – priced on the move above 90 cents. If uncomfortable adding any more to contracts, a Put Option can net a floor of about 87 cents basis the December futures.

Well known and highly respected analyst Dr. O.A. Cleveland recently had an excellent articlementioning the good pricing opportunities available on the 2019 and even 2020 crops. Excellent advice, and I concur.

Source: Cotton Grower

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