Shurely on Cotton: Has Cotton’s Downturn Bottomed Out?
By Dr. Don Shurley
May 26, 2024
Nothing is worse than to have land, money, and other resources already committed to production and watching the market (and the value of expected production) decline. Farming is a biological process and takes time, and time creates risk. Resources must be committed months in advance of production and marketing.
New crop December futures lost approximately 9 cents or 11% over a period of about six weeks from early April to mid-May. That’s the difference between possibly a breakeven crop and a disastrous crop financially.
Since the most recent lows in the 74 to 75 cents area, price (Dec futures) has improved (if we dare call it that) and currently stands between 78 and 79 cents – gaining 3.65 cents thus far this week. Has cotton’s downturn bottomed out?
Right now, I see three “price regions” in this market:
I – Roughly 82.5 to 84.5 cents. This is where we were and relatively happy before the bottom fell out. Looking and hoping for better.
II – 74 to 76.5 cents. The “bottoms” of the past few weeks. We don’t want to return there.
III – The “middle ground” of 77 to 80 cents. Not where we want to be, but better than where we were.
The decline we’ve witnessed in price, as I have read and tried to decipher it, seems largely the result of speculative selling and profit-taking and somewhat also due to demand concerns. If this is true, to correct this, prices will eventually reach a level low enough that entices speculative buying and buying of the physical commodity.
The improvement we’ve seen in more recent days is said to be due to increased buying and exports, prospects for reduced China and Brazil production, and U.S. weather and slowing planting concerns. But this buying is generated by prices in the low 70s, and that’s not healthy for the farmer. If we’re going to pull out of this “70’s problem,” buying (demand) must continue to improve and at even higher prices.
USDA’s monthly supply/demand estimates for May were a mix of mostly not so encouraging news for cotton:
The most recent export reports have been good. In the last three weekly reports, sales have averaged 217,000 bales, and shipments have averaged 247,000 bales. China has been an active buyer.
Planting continues to be on par with average and just a little ahead of last year. But Texas and Georgia are a little behind normal, as are Alabama, Louisiana, South Carolina, and Tennessee.
There are questions and uncertainty about planting: