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Can Cotton Break Out from Its Bearish Trend?
Can Cotton Break Out from Its Bearish Trend?

Yahoo

time09-08-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Can Cotton Break Out from Its Bearish Trend?

Cotton futures on the Intercontinental Exchange edged 0.82% lower in Q2 and were 3.10% lower over the first half of 2025, with the nearby futures contract settling at 66.28 cents per pound on June 30, 2025. In my Q2 2025 Barchart report on soft commodities, I concluded with: More News from Barchart Coffee Prices Settle Lower on Tariff Woes Tariff Turmoil Weighs on Coffee Prices The Bullish Cattle Stampede Rumbles On. Here's What to Watch Next After Record Cattle Highs. Markets move fast. Keep up by reading our FREE midday Barchart Brief newsletter for exclusive charts, analysis, and headlines. Sugar and cotton futures remain under pressure, making lower highs and lower lows. However, the world sugar and cotton futures offer more value than the other softs, as prices are nowhere near historical highs. As the soft commodities are now in the second half of 2025, underperformance compared to the other commodity sectors continues, following a period in which softs led the asset class in 2023 and 2024. Commodity cyclicality is a powerful force. If sugar and cotton prices continue to reach lower lows, they could be excellent candidates for recovery, as low prices cause production and inventories to decline, leading to increased consumption and significant price bottoms. At over 67 cents per pound in early August, cotton prices have risen marginally. However, we may have to wait until 2026 before cotton can break higher from its current bearish trend. A bearish trend since 2022 Cotton futures reached a multi-year $1.5595 per pound high in May 2022 when they ran out of upside steam. The monthly continuous ICE cotton futures chart illustrates the bearish trend of lower highs and lower lows, reaching a low of 60.80 cents per pound in April 2025. At around 67 cents in August 2025, the fluffy fiber futures remain not far above the most recent low and in a bearish trend. Sideways trading and consolidation in 2025 Active month December ICE cotton futures have traded in a sideways range with a bearish bias in 2025. The daily year-to-date December cotton futures chart highlights the 64.24 to 70.93 2025 trading range. While cotton has remained in a bearish trend since 2022, the agricultural commodity's price has gone nowhere fast in 2025. Cotton fundamentals In its July World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates Report, the USDA told the cotton market the following: The USDA increased its forecast for ending cotton inventories for 2025/2026, while it left the upland price projection unchanged at 62 cents per pound. The report was bearish, suggesting that global cotton production was sufficient to meet the worldwide demand. Meanwhile, U.S. tariffs could alter cotton's fundamentals as the trade barriers can distort prices. However, in early August 2025, cotton remains in a multi-year bearish trend with prices near the low end of the trading range. Levels to watch in the cotton futures market The weekly cotton chart highlights the critical technical levels for the coming months and into 2026. The weekly continuous contract chart shows that technical support is at the low of 60.80 from the week of March 31, 2025, with technical resistance at the high of 74.55 cents per pound from the week of September 23, 2024. While cotton remains within the current range, selling rallies above 70 cents and buying weakness towards the 60 cents level could be the optimal trading strategy. Look to buy for 2026 if cotton makes lower lows over the coming months- Commodity cyclicality Any price weakness that takes cotton to or below 60 cents per pound could be a great opportunity to load up on the fiber for spring 2026. Bullish cotton trends tend to reach annual highs in spring and early summer. The 2011 high of $2.1970 per pound occurred in May. Cotton reached annual highs above the 90 cents level in March 2014 and June 2018 and rallied to a high of $1.5595 in May 2022. Cotton's seasonal highs tend to occur during the uncertainty of the annual crop years during the spring planting season. At 60 cents or below, cotton offers value for the coming spring, as the cure for low cotton prices is those low prices themselves. At depressed levels, production tends to decline, inventories drop, and consumption increases, leading to price bottoms and subsequent price recoveries. After three years of bearish price action, with prices near the 60 cents level, the odds of a recovery developing next spring are high. Buying cotton futures for spring or summer 2026 delivery may be optimal, as the price limits downside potential and the level offers significant value. There are no cotton ETF or ETN products, so the futures are the only option for investment or a trading position. Each ICE cotton futures contract contains 50,000 pounds of the fluffy fiber. At 67 cents per pound, the contract value is $33,500. The current original margin requirement of $1,771 per contract means that a market participant can control $33,000 worth of cotton futures with a 5.3% down payment. If equity falls below $1,610 per contract, the exchange requires maintenance margin payments. Commodity cyclicality could favor cotton in 2026 as the price has declined to a level that limits downside risk. Rallies over the past years show that the upside potential could be far higher than the current price level. From a risk-reward perspective, building a long position in cotton on a scale-down basis from the 65 cents per pound level could make sense for 2026. The forward cotton curve shows that cotton for March and May 2026 delivery is trading at 68.36 and 69.63 cents, respectively. At lower levels, these contracts could offer value with limited risk for the coming year. On the date of publication, Andrew Hecht did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Cotton Closes Friday with Gains
Cotton Closes Friday with Gains

Yahoo

time08-08-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Cotton Closes Friday with Gains

Cotton futures shrugged off the early weakness on Friday, with contracts up 17 to 36 points higher, as December closed out the week 24 points higher. The US dollar index was back down $0.134 to $98.095, as crude oil futures were down 46 cents. CFTC data showed a total of 14,791 contracts added to the managed money net short position in the week of August 5. That position stood at -55,152 contracts as of Tuesday. More News from Barchart Tighter Supplies and Brazilian Real Weakness Boost Coffee Prices Signs of Tighter Supplies Lift Coffee Prices Market Bottom Alert: Corn Prices Look Set to Gain After August 12 Our exclusive Barchart Brief newsletter is your FREE midday guide to what's moving stocks, sectors, and investor sentiment - delivered right when you need the info most. Subscribe today! The Cotlook A Index was down 25 points at 78.00 cents on August 6. ICE cotton stocks were down 3,375 bales on 8/7 via decertifications, with the certified stocks level at 18,242 bales. USDA's Adjusted World Price (AWP) was down 13 points on Thursday afternoon at 54.39 cents/lb. Oct 25 Cotton is at 65.32, up 36 points, Dec 25 Cotton is at 66.6, up 17 points, Mar 26 Cotton is at 68.07, up 17 points On the date of publication, Austin Schroeder did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on

Cotton Posting Tuesday Gains
Cotton Posting Tuesday Gains

Yahoo

time05-08-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Cotton Posting Tuesday Gains

Cotton futures are showing gains of 41 to 88 points so far on the Tuesday session. The US dollar index is back down $0.056 to $98.520, as crude oil futures are another $1.00/barrel lower. Cotton exports excluding linters during June totaled 1.008 million bales, a 22.03% improvement from last year but down 20.02% from May. More News from Barchart Coffee Prices Rally on Below-Average Rainfall in Brazil Below-Average Rain in Brazil Supports Coffee Prices Is the Corn Market Undervalued? Stop Missing Market Moves: Get the FREE Barchart Brief – your midday dose of stock movers, trending sectors, and actionable trade ideas, delivered right to your inbox. Sign Up Now! The weekly Crop Progress report from NASS showed a total of 87% of the US cotton crop squared by August 3, 2 points back of normal. There were also 55% setting bolls, 3 points behind average, with 5% of the crop bolls opening. Conditions were unchanged at 55% gd/ex, with the Brugler500 index steady at 345 despite some shifting. Ratings in TX were down 8 points with GA improving 8 points The Cotlook A Index was down a penny at 77.50 cents on August 4. ICE cotton stocks were steady on 8/4, with the certified stocks level at 21,617 bales. USDA's Adjusted World Price (AWP) was back down 43 points on last week at 54.52 cents/lb. It is good through Thursday. Oct 25 Cotton is at 65.44, up 88 points, Dec 25 Cotton is at 67.14, up 50 points, Mar 26 Cotton is at 68.39, up 41 points On the date of publication, Austin Schroeder did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Cotton Falls Back on Thursday
Cotton Falls Back on Thursday

Yahoo

time02-08-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Cotton Falls Back on Thursday

Cotton futures closed out the Thursday session with contracts down 24 to 29 points, as outside markets continued to add pressure. The US dollar index was up $0.249 to $99.835, as crude oil futures were 78 cents/barrel lower. This morning's Export Sales report indicated a total of 39,124 RB of old crop cotton in the week ending on July 24, the highest in 3 weeks. Vietnam was the buyer of 27,100 RB. Sales for new crop were 71,683 RB. The top buyer of 2025/26 was Vietnam at 27,400 RB, with 13,800 RB sold to Honduras. Shipments were 230,949 RB which was a 3-week high. The top destination was Vietnam at 66,400 RB, with 44,400 RB headed to Turkey. More News from Barchart Reduced Tariff Risks Weigh on Arabica Coffee Brazil Tariff Risks Underpin Arabica Coffee Prices Arabica Coffee Rises as Tariff Risks Remain Tired of missing midday reversals? The FREE Barchart Brief newsletter keeps you in the know. Sign up now! The Seam showed sales of 326 bales on Wednesday, with an average price of 64.83 cents/lb. The Cotlook A Index was down 60 points at 78.20 cents on July 30. ICE cotton stocks were steady on 7/30. with the certified stocks level at 21,617 bales. USDA's Adjusted World Price (AWP) was back down 43 points this afternoon at 54.52 cents/lb. Oct 25 Cotton closed at 65.61, down 29 points, Dec 25 Cotton closed at 67.25, down 25 points, Mar 26 Cotton closed at 68.6, down 24 points On the date of publication, Austin Schroeder did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Cotton Heads Lower into the Weekend
Cotton Heads Lower into the Weekend

Yahoo

time01-08-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Cotton Heads Lower into the Weekend

Cotton futures closed the Friday session with contracts down 89 to 119 points across the nearbys. December was down 187 points on the week. The US dollar index was back down $1.318 to $98.425, as crude oil futures were $2.09/barrel lower. CFTC data showed spec funds in cotton futures and options adding 482 contracts from their net short position as of 7/29, taking the position to 40,361 contracts. More News from Barchart Brazil Tariff Risks Underpin Arabica Coffee Prices Arabica Coffee Rises as Tariff Risks Remain Cocoa Prices Settle Sharply Higher on Supply Woes Markets move fast. Keep up by reading our FREE midday Barchart Brief newsletter for exclusive charts, analysis, and headlines. The Seam showed sales of 176 bales on Thursday, with an average price of 60.50 cents/lb. The Cotlook A Index was down 25 points at 77.95 cents on July 31. ICE cotton stocks were steady on 7/31, with the certified stocks level at 21,617 bales. USDA's Adjusted World Price (AWP) was back down 43 points on Thursday afternoon at 54.52 cents/lb. Oct 25 Cotton closed at 64.42, down 119 points, Dec 25 Cotton closed at 66.36, down 89 points, Mar 26 Cotton closed at 67.69, down 91 points On the date of publication, Austin Schroeder did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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