Doane Cotton Close: Volatile Week of Huge, Wild Swings

Doane Cotton Close: Volatile Week of Huge, Wild Swings

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ItΆs been a tremendously volatile week with huge swings in both directions on nearly a daily basis. HereΆs how the weekly cotton chart looks now, as of todayΆs close:

On Monday, we saw the biggest single session plunge in months on news that China was going to lower its price for Reserve cotton to domestic mills for the first time since last November. The bigger news was that Beijing made the announcement without any reference at all to easing import quotas in conjunction with purchases of state-owned cotton.

Tuesday we got an exaggerated move to the upside following a report showing ginnings YTD about 2.5% lower than one would have expected if USDAΆs current production estimate for 2013 is correct. That doesnΆt seem like much, but it works out to over 300,000 bales “short of expectations”. With projected ending stocks already somewhat tight at 2.8 million bales, the idea that ending stocks might be only 2.5 million bales or even lower spooked another big spike to the upside because that would be less than a 70-day supply in a market where a 90-day supply is considered the “threshold of tightness.”

Then Wednesday was another tumultuous day. The range of 659 pts was the largest since July of 2011 on huge volume of 56,000 contracts. But at one point, a single sale of 1,000 contracts drove futures down 250 pts in less than a minute! But the net result on the weekly chart was a potentially massive downside key reversal.

Monday USDA will release prospective plantings. Based on our recent poll results, we suspect the increase planned for 2014 may be a bit larger than what is expected. (Watch for a special website update on the report and market reaction by noon Monday.)

This weekΆs export news was mixed. Actual loadings for the week were down 21% from last week and 16% below the 4-week average. New weekly sales reported Thursday were up 31% from last weekΆs dismal number, but still 11% below the 4-week average. Sales YTD are now running a 110,000 bale deficit from where they should be to sustain USDAΆs current forecast for the marketing year.

There have been some torrential rains in Australian cotton country this past week that caught a lot of that countryΆs cotton with bolls open. That will hurt quality and could shift some new business to the U.S.

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