High competing crop prices or drought responses do not appear to be likely major influences in 2016. Perhaps peanut plantings will claim some cotton ground at the margin.  In the meantime, I donΆt see what will significantly add to or subtract from current projections that we have in the 9 to 10 million acre range.  Assuming average yields and abandonment, we could therefore have from 13.7 to 15.2 million bales of production. That would mostly put the U.S. cotton balance sheet in a neutral stocks outcome, suggesting more of the same in terms of prices. The possibility of a summer-time weather market rally is still there if we have poor growing/maturation conditions on a low planted acreage. 

For additional thoughts on these and other cotton marketing topics, please visit my weekly on-line newsletter at http://agrilife.org/cottonmarketing/.

Figure 1