Cotton warehouses from China to Australia are bulging with the biggest-ever glut, a year after record prices spurred farmers to expand output.
Harvests will exceed demand for a third year, swelling stockpiles by 10 percent to 74.67 million 480-pound bales by August, the U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates. Inventories in China, the biggest user, will triple over two years to a record as domestic demand slumps to the lowest since 2005, USDA data show. Cotton may drop 10 percent to 67.87 cents a pound by the end of the year, according to the average of 20 analyst and merchant estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
Slowing economic growth means the surplus will widen even as China, Australia, Brazil and India produce less this season, leading to the first global output decline in three years, the USDA predicts. Prices already plunged 66 percent from last year’s peak of $2.197 a pound, reducing costs for buyers from Hanesbrands Inc. (HBI), the maker of Champion apparel, to San Francisco-based Levi Strauss & Co.
“There’s an awful lot of cotton around,” said David Wookey, a managing director and trader at Isis Commodities Ltd., a cotton merchant in Boston, England, founded 17 years ago. “You’ve got a large stocks situation that’s been coupled with weaker global consumption.”
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Surplus Widens
Prices tumbled 18 percent this year on ICE Futures U.S. in New York, exceeded only by arabica coffee’s 27 percent decline among the 24 commodities tracked by the Standard & Poor’s GSCI Spot Index. The gauge rose 4.3 percent. The MSCI All-Country World Index of equities gained 7.2 percent. Treasuries returned 2.5 percent, according to Bank of America Corp.
The world’s farmers will produce 114.1 million bales in the year that began Aug. 1, 7 percent less than the record 122.7 million a year earlier, the USDA predicts. Demand will be 108.2 million, the second-lowest level in nine years, the agency estimates. A bale provides enough material for 1,217 men’s T- shirts, according to the National Cotton Council of America.
China will import 46 percent less cotton in the 12 months through July 31, according to USDA. Consumption in the country may drop 11 percent this year, Zhang Hongxia, the chairman of Hong Kong-listed Weiqiao Textile Co. (2698), China’s largest cotton- textile maker, said in an interview Aug. 20. Cotlook Ltd., the Birkenhead, England-based research company, boosted its surplus estimate by 55 percent on Aug. 23, citing the deceleration in Chinese demand.
Crop Switching
Smaller harvests may bolster prices that reached a 31-month low of 64.61 cents on June 4, said Jon Devine, an economist for Cotton Inc., an industry group in Cary, North Carolina. Hedge funds on Aug. 28 were the most bullish since February, holding a net-long position of 13,047 futures and options contracts, Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. The contract for December delivery fell 2 percent to settle at 75.68 cents today on ICE.
U.S. farmers, the largest exporters, can earn more planting crops including corn or soybeans, which reached record prices this year after a drought that T-Storm Weather LLC estimates was the most-severe since 1936, based on temperature and rainfall in June and July. A USDA report on May 1 showed cotton growers lost $154.17 an acre in 2011 and corn earned $194.52. While the agency won’t estimate this year’s returns until Oct. 1, cotton prices are 22 percent lower and corn is up 40 percent.
Indian Monsoon
Matt Huie, a farmer in Beeville, Texas, who planted 3,600 acres of the fiber last year, said he “probably would consider not planting cotton at all.”
“I would expect massive reductions of cotton acreage,” said Carsten Fritsch, an analyst at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt. “This should lead to a decline in supply and to rising cotton prices next year.”
The monsoon in India, the second-largest exporter, has been 12 percent below the 50-year average, the Meteorological Department said Aug. 30. The weather pattern accounts for about 70 percent of the country’s annual rainfall.
Plantings in Australia during the next three months may drop more than 12 percent, according to the government. Output in Brazil may tumble 26 percent as farmers shift to soybeans, the USDA’S Foreign Agricultural Service said in a report posted yesterday on its website.
Expectations for lower prices may spur traders to break $600 million of contracts this year, or 5 percent of global trade in the fiber, said Terry Townsend, the executive director of the International Cotton Advisory Committee in Washington. That’s down from about 20 percent in the past two years because prices are less volatile, he said.
via Cotton Glut Seen Extending Slump as Levi’s Costs Slide – Businessweek.