US cotton ends higher in volatile trade, spreading heavy

US cotton ends higher in volatile trade, spreading heavy

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NEW YORK, April 5 (Reuters) - Benchmark U.S. cotton futures
ended up 2.8 percent on Tuesday, on position juggling in heavy,
indecisive trade before the release of a government crop report
at the end of the week, brokers said.

Much of the business was in spreads, as players traded the
difference between spot May and the new-crop December cotton
contracts. They also played the July-December spread.

The key May cotton contract on ICE Futures U.S.
increased 5.51 cents to close at $2.0106 per lb, having ranged
from down the 7-cent limit down at $1.8885 to up the daily
limit at $2,0255.

The new-crop December cotton contract gained 1.67
cents to end at $1.3776.

Total volume traded in the cotton market was around 41,500
lots, over two-thirds above the 30-day norm, Thomson Reuters
preliminary data showed.

Reflecting the high level of investor interest, open
interest in cotton futures stood at 193,264 lots as of April 4,
a 6-1/2 week high, according to ICE Futures U.S. figures.

'The market is gyrating like this before the report,' said
Keith Brown, president of commodity firm Keith Brown and Co. in
Moultrie, Georgia.

The U.S. Agriculture Department releases its April
supply/demand report on Friday. Traders said the focus was on
any adjustments in consumption and stock levels.

The first estimates for the 2011/12 cotton season will be
released by the USDA in its May production report.

The market has already digested the USDA's estimate of U.S.
cotton sowings and players are especially worried about the dry
spell in the top growing area of Texas, which is expected to
plant about half of the U.S. cotton crop.

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