The world numbers represented the main holiday cheer for cotton prices.  For the second month in a row, the December WASDE reportΆs most influential month-over-month adjustments were decreases in projected foreign production. This happened in Pakistan (-1,000,000 bales), China (-700,000 bales), Central Asia (-170,000 bales), Turkey (-150,000 bales), and the EU (-100,000 bales). These cuts outweighed a combined 400,000 bale month-over-month increase in Australian and West African production. 

ChinaΆs projected imports were cut to only 5.5 million bales, putting them at a 31 percent year-over-year decline in imports.  USDA also cut Chinese consumption again by another 500,000 bales, but this was partially absorbed by increases in Bangladesh and Vietnam. There were other small adjustments to foreign carry-in, imports, exports, consumption, and the loss ("fudge factor") category.  The bottom line of these adjustments was a 1.7 million bale month-over-month decrease in projected world ending stocks.  Such a monthly adjustment would be somewhat price supporting according to economic theory and history (see Figure 1). 

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