Monthly Cotton Economic Letter: August 2024

Recent Price Movement

All cotton benchmarks decreased over the past month.

  • The December NY/ICE futures contract broke through the 70 cent/lb level in the second half of July. This represented the first time that a most actively traded contract fell below 70 cents/lb since November 2020.

  • Over the past month, the A Index dropped below 80 cents/lb for the first time since December 2020.

  • In June, the Chinese Cotton Index (CC Index 3128B) fell below 100 cents/lb. Decreases continued in July, and the current value is 93 cents/lb. In domestic terms, prices fell below 15,000 RMB/ton for the first time since December 2022. Current prices are 14,700 RMB/ton. The RMB strengthened against the dollar over the past month, from 7.28 to 7.17 RMB/USD.

  • The decline in Indian spot prices (Shankar-6 quality) was slight, from 88 to 86 cents/lb. In domestic terms, values eased from 58,000 to 56,500 INR/candy. The INR held near 84 INR/USD.

  • Pakistani spot prices fell from 80 to 76 cents/lb. In domestic terms, values dropped from 18,300 to 17,400 PKR/maund. The PKR was steady around 279 PKR/USD.

Supply, Demand & Trade

The latest USDA report featured decreases to figures for global production (from 120.2 to 117.6 million bales) and mill use (from 117.2 to 116.2 million bales). World beginning stocks were lowered significantly (-3.5 million bales, from 79.3 to 75.8 million), driven by revisions to historical figures for China. The net effect for the forecast for 2024/25 ending stocks was a -5.0 million bale reduction (from 82.6 to 77.6 million bales).

More from Sourcing Journal

While the month-over-month decrease in stocks is large, it was due to revisions to historical estimates. Those revisions also impacted figures for previous crop years. As a result, year-over-year comparisons for stocks were less affected. In 2024/25, ending stocks are still projected to increase (+1.8 million bales, from 75.8 to 77.6 million bales). The volume of warehoused supply in 2024/25 is expected to rank as the highest since 2019/20 (crop year most affected by Covid), and as the highest on record when excluding 2019/20 and the period between 2012/13 and 2015/16, when Chinese reserves were exceptional.

At the country level, the largest change to production was for the U.S., where the crop estimate decreased -1.9 million bales (from 17.0 to 15.1 million bales). Other notable updates were made for India (-500,000 bales to 24.5 million) and Cote d’Ivoire (-120,000 bales to 730,000).