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Monthly Economic Letter: October 2024

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Cotton Market Fundamentals & Price Outlook

Recent Price Movement

Cotton benchmarks were flat or higher over the past month.

  • The December NY/ICE futures contract increased from values below 70 cents/lb to those as high as 74 cents/lb in September. In early October, prices retreated slightly, and current levels are near 72 cents/lb.
  • The A Index increased from 79 to 84 cents/lb over the past month.
  • The Chinese Cotton Index (CC Index 3128B) increased from 94 to 100 cents/lb. In domestic terms, prices rose from 14,700 to 15,600 RMB/ton. The RMB strengthened slightly against the dollar, from 7.12 to 7.08 RMB/USD.
  • Indian spot prices (Shankar-6 quality) decreased from 91 to 86 cents/lb.
  • In domestic terms, values fell from 60,000 to 56,700 INR/candy. The INR held near 84 INR/USD.
  • Pakistani spot prices decreased from 81 to 77 cents/lb. In domestic terms, values fell from 18,500 to 17,700 PKR/maund. The PKR was steady at around 278 PKR/USD.

Supply, Demand, & Trade

The latest USDA report featured relatively minor changes to global production (+219,000 bales to 116.6 million) and mill-use (-7,000 bales, essentially holding at 115.7 million). Historical figures were revised, primarily for 2023/24. A net result of those changes was to lower 2024/25 beginning stocks -411,000 bales to 75.2 million.

With the updates to beginning stocks, production, and mill-use, the forecast for 2024/25 ending stocks decreased -167,000 bales to 76.3 million. This ranks as the highest level of warehoused supply outside of the crop year most affected by COVID-19 (2019/20) and those crop years when China had extreme levels of supply in its reserve system (2012/13- 2015/16). In 2024/25, Chinese stocks are forecast to hold near the highest levels recorded since 2015/16. The world-less-China is expected to end 2024/25 with 40.1 million bales of stocks. Apart from the 2019/20 and 2022/23 crop years, this represents the highest level volume of stocks for
the world outside of China.

The largest changes in production included those for China (+400,000 bales to 28.2 million), Brazil (+100,000 bales to 16.8 million), and the U.S. (-311,000 bales to 14.2 million).

For mill-use, the only revision of 100,000 bales or more was for Bangladesh (+100,000 bales to 7.8 million).

The global trade forecast was reduced -513,000 bales to 42.5 million. At the country level, the only notable change to import figures was for China (-500,000 bales to 9.0 million). This widens the decrease expected year-over-year decrease in Chinese import demand. In 2023/24, China imported 15.0 million bales. The largest changes for exports were for the U.S. (-300,000 bales to 11.5 million) and Brazil (-200,000 bales to 12.3 million).

Price Outlook

Several major economies made policy revisions favorable for economic growth over the past month.

Inflation has been weakening globally, allowing central banks to pull back on interest rates. In the U.S., the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates by half a percentage point in September. This was the first time the Fed has made a cut since it began the cycle of rate increases in March 2022.

The European Central Bank began decreasing interest rates before the Federal Reserve and is widely expected to announce two additional decreases in policy rates in October and December.

In China, a series of measures were announced to improve confidence around lending and the housing market. There have also been declarations that government spending would be leveraged to lift economic growth over five percent.

The U.S., the E.U., and China represent three of the largest consumer markets in the world. In the U.S. and the E.U., recent policy moves by the central banks in those locations should not necessarily be considered stimulative. Interest rates in both areas remain well above what likely could be considered the neutral rate (neutral rate is the level of interest rates that is neither stimulative nor contractionary). However, the recent reductions in rates do represent lighter headwinds for economic growth.

The situation in China has been different, with inflation not being a source of concern. As a result, interpretations of the policy movement in China are also different. If China implements a major spending package on top of what it has done to ease credit conditions, it will represent an important stimulative effort (not just a lighter push on the interest rate brakes, which is occurring in the U.S. and the E.U.).

For the global economy, it may be important that all of these favorable policy shifts are happening at the same time. After the period of sluggish growth that followed the onset of inflation and the rise in interest rates, simultaneous revision of policies that are more supportive of growth could lift the outlook for demand and could help encourage order placement through supply chains.

While it will take some time to see if these policy changes have a meaningful impact on cotton demand, there have been developments affecting production. Hurricane Helene hit the southeast growing region of the U.S. cotton belt at a time when about 75% of bolls were open and exposed to the elements. The USDA reduced the U.S. harvest estimate this month, but the size of the decrease was about half of the loss estimated by officials representing cotton growers in Georgia (the largest cotton-growing state in the southeast region and the second-largest cotton-growing state in the U.S.).

Read the full Monthly Economic Letter: October 2024.