Saturday, December 25, 2010

As cotton gets pricey, textile firms turn to polyester

Suresh P. Iyengar
Mumbai, Dec. 25
With the sharp rise in cotton prices, textile manufacturers have shifted their focus to ramping up polyester yarn production capacity.
Alok Industries, a leading integrated textile company, plans to double its polyester yarn capacity to 1,200 tonnes a day by March at an investment of Rs 800 crore.
Mr Sunil O. Khandelwal, Chief Financial Officer, said the company had foreseen the shortage of natural fibre cotton and would begin increasing polyester yarn production from next month.
Similarly, Ganesh Polytex, which produces polyester staple fibre by recycling plastic pet bottles, plans to increase its processing capacity by 15,000 tonnes to 72,000 tpa. As part of its forward integration plans, the company is also putting up 25,000 spindles to produce polyester yarn at its existing Bilaspur plant in Chhattisgarh. This will involve an investment of Rs 125 crore.
Mr Gopal Agarwal, Chief Financial Officer, said Ganesh Polytex would tap the Centre-sponsored Technology Upgradation Fund (TUF) scheme for the spindles.
The price gap between cotton and polyester yarn has widened in the last few months with demand for the former increasing substantially on the back of a lower-than-expected crop this season, said Mr Khandelwal. Cotton yarn of 40s counts currently trades at Rs 260 a kg while polyester yarn of 80-denier is priced at Rs 110-115 a kg. Cotton prices are expected to stabilise by mid-January with arrivals improving. The most popular variety, Shankar-6, may fall from Rs 41,000 to Rs 37,000-38,000 a candy as supply improves.
More than the fall in production, the uncertain Government policy on cotton has made it difficult for companies to plan their future, said an analyst. The textile industry's shift to polyester has pushed up the prices of the key raw material, PTMEG (poly tetra methylene ether glycol), but this has been moderate compared to cotton, he said.
The fall in cotton production over the years has pushed up use of polyester by the textile sector. In the last decade, this has nearly doubled from 30 per cent to 55 per cent and expected to further increase to 70 per cent in the next five years, said Mr Khandelwal.
On the quality issue, he added, a fabric with 75 per cent polyester and 25 per cent cotton is considered a good blend given the price advantage. A shirt made of 100 per cent cotton would cost about Rs 600 while that in polyester Rs 350-400.

Renewed cotton export halts drop in yarn prices

24 Dec, 2010, 01.09AM IST, S Sujatha,ET Bureau 

COIMBATORE: Rising cotton prices on the back of renewed exports have arrested the fall of cotton yarn prices . Further, it has also led to a bullish trend across the textile value chain. 
All industry stakeholders are now trying to hold on to their stocks as the raw material prices are expected to remain high for quite sometime. “Even before yarn manufacturers could absorb the dropping cotton value, the prices have moved up again. So, it will be difficult to bring the yarn prices,” said Coimbatore-based KPR Mills managing director P Natraj. 
The prices of finer count cotton yarn had fallen by around Rs 20-25 per kg while the coarser counts, mainly used by the knitwear manufacturers in Tirupur, are expected to fall by Rs 15-20 per kg in the first week of January as the prices are fixed on monthly basis. The warp yarn had fallen by Rs 10-15 per kg. The prices of 100’s count super fine cotton yarn, which was ruling at Rs 410 per kg during the peak period, has come down to nearly Rs 380-390 per kg. But now, the renewed bullish trend and the compulsions of spinning mills to buy cotton at the current levels due to depleting stocks have created a panic in the market. 
The Southern India Mills Association secretary general K Selvaraju said that the yarn prices will now hold steady as the fabric prices too have started picking up. “There will be no change in yarn prices despite bringing it under restricted list. Yarn prices will come down only when the cotton prices cool off,” he added. 
“Following the curb on yarn exports, the garment exporters were going slow in procuring cotton yarn as they expected prices to drop from January. But the sudden rise in cotton prices have led to panic buying in the market,” said a leading cotton yarn supplier in Tirupur market. 
The price of Shankar-6, the widely used Indian cotton, was quoted at Rs 47,000 per candy in the first week of November. After the suspension of export registration, the prices started cooling off and it reached Rs 40,000 per candy on December 15. But the recent message that the export registration will start again for the un-shipped quantity of 25 lakh bales has pulled up prices to the Rs 43,000-per candy levels. Industry experts feel that it may even go up to Rs 50,000 per candy once the export registration starts
 
 

Friday, December 24, 2010

Centre to allow export of 2.5 million bales of unshipped cotton

December 24, 2010

Special Correspondent
Union Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma on Thursday said the government would allow export of 2.5 million bales of unshipped cotton out of the 5.5 million bales permitted till December 15.
Talking to newsmen here, Mr. Sharma said, “We have reviewed the market arrivals and availability (of cotton). What had been determined as exportable surplus will not be held back. Almost 2.5 million bales have not been shipped so far, we will allow export of that.''
Mr. Sharma said the government had capped export of cotton at 5.5 million bales this year to prevent a sharp rise in domestic prices. Export contracts totalling 5.24 million bales had been registered with the Textile Commissioner. The export registrations were valid only till December 15. Exporters, however, were not able to ship out the entire 5.24 million bales cotton by December 15, with the result that export registrations lapsed.
On their part, exporters had been asking the government to revalidate the contracts, giving them more time to ship out the balance quantum.
The Minister said the government would allow exporters to ship out the balance, but did not clarify whether the existing registrations would be revalidated or traders would have to apply afresh.
According to industry players, exporters had already gone through the registration process for exporting the 2.5 million bales of cotton but failed to meet the December 15 deadline due to various reasons.
The Ministry of Textiles on Wednesday decided not to extend the deadline and subsequently cancelled the registrations. Now the Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT), instead of the Textile Ministry, is working on revised guidelines for export registrations and execution of shipment.
 
 

Thursday, December 23, 2010

India cotton price jumps


MUMBAI (updated on: 2010-12-22 22:19:26 PST):
Cotton prices in India jumped on Wednesday as exporters bought aggressively after the government said it will still allow exports of 2.5 million bales despite expiry of a Dec. 15 deadline, three exporters told Reuters.

Trade Minister Anand Sharma said on Tuesday that India -- the world's second-biggest producer of cotton -- would allow exports in 2010/11 of the 2.5 million bales that exporters have failed to ship so far.

India, which is also the world's second-biggest exporter of cotton, had given permission for exports of 5.5 million bales in the 2010/11 cotton year that began on Oct.1, but had asked exporters to ship the entire quantity from Nov. 1 to Dec. 15.

Exporters managed to ship only about 3 million bales by the deadline as unseasonal rains in October and November delayed arrivals of bales at domestic markets.

"Traders were very active. They were expecting the government will allow exports from first or second week of January," said Chirag Patel, chief executive officer at Jaydeep Cotton Fibers Pvt. Ltd, one of the country's leading exporters.

In India, the prices of the most common Shankar-6 variety rose by 900 rupees to 43,000 rupees ($952.8) per candy of 356 kg each on Wednesday afternoon.

"Indian cotton is much cheaper than Chinese or U.S. cotton. Exporters are expecting buyers in China will pay higher prices to secure supplies," said Dharmesh Lakhani, a trader and exporter at Rajkot in the western state of Gujarat.

Overseas demand for Indian cotton has increased after bad weather hit crops in China and Pakistan, both leading consumers.

U.S. cotton futures fell more than 3 percent on Wednesday as the market took a breather after climbing to an all-time high in the last session on speculative buying and tight supplies, while China's cotton market lost more that 2 percent. "Overall cotton arrivals have picked up, but still supply of quality fibre is not sufficient," said Paresh Valia, an exporter based in Mahuva, in Bhavnagar district of Gujarat.

Domestic cotton arrivals -- bales which are sold domestically at Indian spot markets -- have risen 1.9 percent so far in the 2010/11 season over a year ago on higher output and accelerated harvesting after the weather turned dry, the state-run Cotton Corp of India said on Dec. 20.

India is likely to produce more than 32.5 million bales of cotton in 2010/11, topping last year's 29.5 million bales, industry and government officials have said.
 
 

India Tightens Rules on Cotton Exports


DECEMBER 23, 2010, 8:35 A.M. ET

MUMBAI –India has tightened the rules for issuing permits to export cotton yarn in a bid to control prices and ensure better supplies for local textile mills and apparel makers.
The Directorate General of Foreign Trade said in a statement late Wednesday that the commodity has been included on a list of restricted export items. That means exporters seeking new permits will now have to approach the foreign trade office instead of the textile ministry, which was issuing export certificates until now.
The foreign trade office said it will work out the modalities for the grant of new export permits at a later date.
Local cotton yarn prices in November rose 5%-7% as exporters sought to take advantage of a global shortage, although prices came down this month after the government imposed a cap of 720 million kilograms on cotton yarn exports in the fiscal year through March.
"Prices of cotton yarn have already softened slightly this month and we may see a further fall in the coming days," said an executive with the South India Cotton Association who declined to be named.
Trade Secretary Rahul Khullar said Wednesday a panel of top bureaucrats will review the export cap on Jan. 15.
India is estimated to produce around 3,550 million kilograms of cotton yarn in 2010-11. Demand for Indian cotton and yarn has soared over the past few months because of crop damage in China and Pakistan. India is one of the world's top cotton yarn exporters and its key buyers include China, Pakistan and Bangladesh.
India usually exports around 600 million kilograms of cotton yarn annually, according to industry estimates. It exported around 460 million kilograms of yarn between April 1 and Oct. 31.
As shipments are still going on, the new rule will help improve local supplies only if some exporters fail to export their approved quantities within a stipulated period.
Write to Dilipp S Nag at dilipp.nag@dowjones.com
 
 

India cotton price jumps on exports green light

Wed Dec 22, 2010 1:42pm IST
* Prices seen rising further on strong export demand
* Govt seen allowing exports from early Jan-exporters
* Arrivals rise on dry weather, quality produce still scarce
By Rajendra Jadhav
MUMBAI, Dec 22 (Reuters) - Cotton prices in India jumped on Wednesday as exporters bought aggressively after the government said it will still allow exports of 2.5 million bales despite expiry of a Dec. 15 deadline, three exporters told Reuters.
Trade Minister Anand Sharma said on Tuesday that India -- the world's second-biggest producer of cotton -- would allow exports in 2010/11 of the 2.5 million bales that exporters have failed to ship so far. 
India, which is also the world's second-biggest exporter of cotton, had given permission for exports of 5.5 million bales in the 2010/11 cotton year that began on Oct.1, but had asked exporters to ship the entire quantity from Nov. 1 to Dec. 15.
Exporters managed to ship only about 3 million bales by the deadline as unseasonal rains in October and November delayed arrivals of bales at domestic markets.
"Traders were very active. They were expecting the government will allow exports from first or second week of January," said Chirag Patel, chief executive officer at Jaydeep Cotton Fibers Pvt. Ltd, one of the country's leading exporters.
In India, the prices of the most common Shankar-6 variety rose by 900 rupees to 43,000 rupees ($952.8) per candy of 356 kg each on Wednesday afternoon.
"Indian cotton is much cheaper than Chinese or U.S. cotton. Exporters are expecting buyers in China will pay higher prices to secure supplies," said Dharmesh Lakhani, a trader and exporter at Rajkot in the western state of Gujarat.
Overseas demand for Indian cotton has increased after bad weather hit crops in China and Pakistan, both leading consumers.
U.S. cotton futures fell more than 3 percent on Wednesday as the market took a breather after climbing to an all-time high in the last session on speculative buying and tight supplies, while China's cotton market lost more that 2 percent.
"Overall cotton arrivals have picked up, but still supply of quality fibre is not sufficient," said Paresh Valia, an exporter based in Mahuva, in Bhavnagar district of Gujarat.
Domestic cotton arrivals -- bales which are sold domestically at Indian spot markets -- have risen 1.9 percent so far in the 2010/11 season over a year ago on higher output and accelerated harvesting after the weather turned dry, the state-run Cotton Corp of India said on Dec. 20. 
India is likely to produce more than 32.5 million bales of cotton in 2010/11, topping last year's 29.5 million bales, industry and government officials have said.

Govt puts cotton yarn exports under restricted category

New Delhi, Dec 22 (PTI) The government today brought cotton yarn export under licence regime by putting it under the"restricted"category in the backdrop of sharp rise in prices, which have hit garment manufacturers.
The policy change notified by the Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) has put a hindrance to the cotton yarn export, even to the extent of 720 million kg permitted earlier. The move comes in the wake of 85 per cent jump in yarn prices in the last nine months. While traders have exhausted the registrations, up to the ceiling of 720 million kg, the actual exports aggregated 530 million kg. The registrations will expire on January 15 by which all export transactions have to be completed. Commerce Secretary Rahul Khullar told reporters that the government would review the situation after January 15 and then only decide whether to allow further exports."The limit at the present moment has been fixed at 720 million kg, that is subject to review. We will review that and come back to you by mid-January,"he said. He said the restriction would also be applicable to the yarn-making in the export processing and special economic zones, as of now. But, the government has been flooded with representations from these units seeking waiver from the export bar. Khullar said there is a tug of war between different segments of the textile industry -- yarn makers and fabric and garment manufacturers. While the yarn makers decry the restrictions, the move has come in as a relief to the garment makers. As for the export of cotton, exporters can ship only 2.5 million bales- the balance from the overall ceiling of 5.5 million bales imposed in September. However, the traders have to go in for fresh registrations with the DGFT and not the Textile Commissioner, as was the case earlier. The Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI) said the basic problem arose out of high cotton prices.
 
 
 

India to Issue New Permits for Cotton Exports

DECEMBER 22, 2010, 9:00 A.M. ET
NEW DELHI – India will issue fresh permits for cotton exports, Rita Menon, a senior official from India's Ministry of Textiles, said Wednesday.
The government had previously allowed exports of 5.5 million bales of 170 kilograms each between Nov. 1-Dec. 15. Many traders actually failed to meet export commitments after heavy rains delayed the cotton harvest in some areas.
Trade Minister Anand Sharma said Tuesday 2.5 million bales from this entitlement still need to be shipped.
Demand for Indian cotton has soared in the past few months as the country is expecting a bumper crop of 32.5 million bales in the year through Sept., 30, 2011, thanks to higher plantings at a time when crops in other key producing states like China and Pakistan have been hurt by floods.
Applications for new permits are unlikely to begin before Jan. 5 as traders are required to submit dispatch details with the government within 21 days of actual shipment, according to senior trade officials.
Uncertainties over when the permits will be issued will delay shipments to buyers including China, Pakistan and Bangladesh, which together account for more than 80% of the country's total exports, the trade officials said.
The delay in supplies from India – the world's second-largest exporter – is also expected to drive up global prices further, they added.
IntercontinentalExchange cotton futures hit an all-time high Tuesday, surpassing Monday's record rate, and ended 1.2% up at $1.567 a pound for March delivery, over worries supplies will be tight in the coming year.
Issuing new permits is unlikely to drive up local prices because the market had already factored in exports of 5.5 million bales in 2010-11, D.K. Nair, secretary-general of the Confederation of Indian Textile Industry, said Tuesday.
But in the past year, huge export demand drove up local prices by more than 70%. India's textile industry, the country's top consumer of cotton, has staunchly opposed loosening cotton exports over fears of local shortages.

India to Decide Cotton Export Limit in Jan


Author: * Time:Dec 23 2010 9:04AM
Indian government will decide whether to raise its export limit for cotton above 5.5 million bales for 2010-11 in mid-January, trade secretary Rahul Khullar said on Wednesday, and registration for current export quotas will reopen next week. 
Trade minister Anand Sharma said on Tuesday India would allow exports in 2010-11 of the 2.5 million bales that exporters have failed to ship so far under the 5.5 million bales allowed. 
India, the world's second-biggest producer and exporter of cotton, had given permission for exports of 5.5 million bales in the 2010-11 cotton year that began on October 1, but had asked exporters to ship the entire quantity from November 1 to December 15. 
Exporters managed to ship only about 3 million bales by the deadline as unseasonal rains in October and November delayed arrivals of bales at domestic markets. 
"A committee comprising the textile, agriculture and commerce secretaries will review the demand-supply situation and take a call on raising the limit on January 15," Khullar said. 
Cotton exporters are demanding permission to ship up to 8 million bales in 2010-11 as the country is set to harvest more than 32.5 million bales in 2010-11, topping last year's 29.5 million bales, industry and government officials have said. 

"I think from the first or second week of January the government will allow shipments of 2.5 million bales," said Chirag Patel, chief executive officer at Jaydeep Cotton Fibers Pvt. Ltd, one of the country's leading exporters. 
Overseas demand for cotton has increased after bad weather hit crops in China and Pakistan, both leading consumers. "The country has also put a cap on cotton yarn exports at 720 million kg and exporters have so far managed to export 530 million kg," Khullar said. 

Fresh registration for cotton exports to begin in January


BS Reporter / Mumbai December 23, 2010, 0:09 IST
The registration for exports of the remaining 2.5 million bales (1 billion = 170 kgs) of cotton – the total allocation was for 5.5 million bales – is likely to start in the first week of January.
According to industry insiders, exporters had already gone through the registration process for exporting the 2.5 million bales of cotton but failed to meet the December 15 deadline due to various reasons. The Ministry of Textiles on Wednesday decided not to extend the deadline and subsequently cancelled the registrations.
Earlier this week, the Ministry of Commerce had hinted that fresh registrations had to be done with the directorate general of foreign trade (DGFT), instead of the Textile Commissioner. DGFT is also working on revised guidelines for export registrations and execution of shipment. The traders believe the new norms will be favourable for the industry.
The industry had come up with three suggestions to facilitate export of cotton: (i) Exports should be registered only when a valid letter of credit (LC) is issued by a bank. (At present, exports can also be executed against cash and industry insiders feel that it opens room for trade manipulation.)
(ii) The shipment period should be reduced from 45 days to 30 days to ensure that only genuine traders will enter the buying agreement and execute deals. (The 45-day period allowed traders to negotiate with buyers with the wrong intention.)
(iii) To ensure that traders cannot hoard huge quantities of cotton in neighbouring countries like Bangladesh by opening up subsidiary offices and transport to other destinations when prices rise or buyers agree to pay a premium. (The process would delay delivery of goods for months behind the actual shipment from India.)
“Over and above, we had urged the government to take punitive actions against such traders who have malafied intentions or ban them from exports in the future,” said M B Lal former CMD of Cotton Corporation of India (CCI) and MD of a Mumbai- based cotton traders and exporter Shail Exports.
In September, the textile ministry had opened registration for 5.5 million bales of cotton exports. But, within ten days between October 1-15 the registered quantity surpassed the quota. The government, therefore, did not allow fresh registrations.
Cotton importers suddenly shifted to India when huge quantities of the crop was damaged in floods in Pakistan and China witnessed a surge in domestic use resulting into a dramatic rise in global prices. The prices of the benchmark variety of cotton Shankar 6 shot up sharply in the last three months to Rs 11,838 a quintal on Wednesday as against Rs 9,617 a quintal on September 1.
Traders, however, are divided over the quantity of cotton production in India. Lal said the country’s total cotton output should be around 35 million bales, but an industry veteran, requesting anonymity, said the total output should be at 33.5 million bales because huge quantity of crop was damaged in Andhra Pradesh.
Owing to unseasonal rainfall, around 30 per cent of cotton crop was damaged in Andhra Pradesh. Total cotton output in the state was reported at 5.4 million bales.
However, according to Cotton Association of India (CAI) estimates, the total output will remain at 34.7 million bales this season, against 30.75 million bales in the previous season. The Cotton Advisory Board (CAB), under the supervision of the Textile Ministry, had estimated the total output at 32.5 million bales.
 
 
 

Govt. welcomes all for new cotton exports registration


Saurabh Gupta | 22 Dec, 2010
The Government Wednesday welcomed all cotton exporters (new and old) for registration of the remaining portion of the 5.5 million bales (of 170 kg) that is allowed for shipments this cotton season (October 2010-September 2011).

"We welcome all cotton exporters (old and new) for registration of 2.5 million bales of unshipped cotton out of the 5.5 million bales permitted this year," Union Minister for Textiles Dayanidhi Maran told media on the sidelines an award function in New Delhi.

The minister stated this on a question that whether the government will allow only registered exporter for the remaining shipment of cotton this season or will consider new application.

Maran said, "The decision to permit export of 5.5 million bales only in the current cotton season stands."

The entire shipment quota was to be completed by December 15. However, so far cotton exports have reached less than half the permissible limit on supply constraints. A Group of Ministers (GoM) had allowed 5.5 million bales for exports during the cotton season 2010-11 (October-September), but exporters failed to ship the entire quantity after unseasonal rains delayed arrivals in the spot market. 

In a notification issued last week, the Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) said that it would issue the Export Authorisation Registration Certificate (EARC) to cotton exporters in place of the Office of Textile Commissioner, Mumbai with immediate effect.

While the government is sticking to its stance to allow shipping of 5.5 million bales of cotton export this season, some textile industry bodies including the Confederation of Indian Textiles Industry (CITI) and the Tirupur Exporters Association (TEA) have urged it to curb cotton exports pointing to the fact that India's actual production of cotton this year may be less than even 300 lakh bales against Cotton Advisory Board's earlier estimates of 325 lakh bales.

More recently, global rating agency Fitch had also stated that continued rise in cotton prices, driven by supply squeeze of the raw material, are likely to hurt margins of Indian textile manufacturers through the current cotton season.
 
 

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Extension of export deadline boosts cotton

Our Correspondent
Rajkot, Dec. 20
Cotton prices continued to rise across various markets on Monday as exporters tried to cover the needs and mills were also in fray.
On Friday, the Union Government said exports would continue until the permitted 55 lakh bales were shipped out of the country.
On Monday, prices increased Rs 700 to Rs 42,100-42,200 a candy (356 kg).
Cotton price at Rajkot was quoted on Rs 42,100-42,200 for a candy, compared with Friday price of Rs 41,500. Raw cotton was traded on Rs 900-930 a maund (of 20 kg), up by Rs 15 in Rajkot.
In Gondal, prices increased to Rs 900-930 a maund, up Rs 10 over Friday.
Mr Mahesh Patodia, a trader at Gondal market, said demand was heavy, leading to rise in prices.
Traders in Rajkot said that “Prices are increasing as mills are buying cotton more than exporters as they fear shortage of the material.”
A Rajkot-based trader said: “Price will move up more for coming 2 to 3 days and then it will be stabilise for some time.”
Mr Jaisukhbhai Patel, a trader at Gondal market, said arrivals were low compared with the demand.
“Arrivals are poor and the crop is feared to be low,” he said.
Meanwhile, the Cotton Association of India (CAI) has lowered its estimate for 2010-11 season (October-September) to 347.5 lakh bales against 357 lakh bales it forecast in October.
Gujarat, the largest cotton growing State in India is now estimated to produce 116 lakh bales, 4,00,000 bales short of the initial estimates.
About 70,000 bales of cotton arrive in Gujarat and 2.03 lakh bales arrive in India in a day.



Cotton Rises to Record for Second Straight Day on Global Fiber Shortfall

By Yi Tian and Jae Hur - Dec 22, 2010 1:43 AM GMT+0530 Tue Dec 21 20:13:50 GMT 2010
Cotton futures jumped to a record for the second straight day on speculation that global supplies will fail to keep pace with rising demand in China, the world’s largest user.
China’s custom agency said today that imports in November surged 31 percent from October. Shandong, the country’s second- biggest producing province, said on Dec. 17 that output dropped 22 percent this year from 2010. In India, the world’s No. 2 grower, production will be less than forecast, an industry group said yesterday.
“The crops are disappointing,” said Robin Rosenberg, a futures strategist at PFGBest, a brokerage in Chicago. “Prices will go even higher.”
Cotton for March delivery advanced by the exchange limit of 5 cents, or 3.2 percent, to close at an all-time high of $1.5912 a pound at 2:30 p.m. on ICE Futures U.S. in New York. The price has more than doubled this year, heading for the biggest annual gain since 1973.
“It’s not just new buyers that are driving prices up,” Rosenberg said. Investors unwinding bets on falling prices also helped support futures, he said.
Cotton may rise to $1.75 in a few weeks, he said.
Australian production this season may total 3.8 million bales, with some reduction to the forecast possible because of excess rains and flooding, National Australia Bank Ltd. said in a report today. “Indications suggest that crop loss is not major,” the bank said.
Stockpiles in the U.S., the biggest exporter, are forecast to plunge for a third straight year to the lowest level since at least 1960, government data show.


Cotton surges by exchange limit to record on supply shortfall

21 Dec, 2010 - Global  
Cotton futures in New York jumped to a record, gaining by the daily limit for a second day, on speculation that global demand led by China will surpass supply. 
Cotton for March delivery advanced 5 cents, or 3.2 percent, to an all-time high of $1.5912 a pound on ICE Futures U.S. in New York. Prices have more than doubled this year, heading for the biggest annual gain since 1973. 
“It’s driven by tight supply,” said Hiroyuki Kikukawa, the general manager of research at IDO Securities Co. in Tokyo. “The market is extremely overbought and we may see a small correction later this week before the Christmas holiday.” 
Cotton’s 14-day relative strength index has since Dec. 17 been above 70, a level some investors use to predict that the price of an asset is poised to fall. 
The Thomson Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 commodities extended its rally yesterday to the highest level in more than two years as cotton surged and most other raw materials advanced. The index gained 1.1 percent to 324.27, the highest level since Oct. 6, 2008. 
Australian cotton production this season may total 3.8 million bales, with some reduction to the forecast possible because of excess rains and flooding, National Australia Bank Ltd. said in an e-mailed report today. “Indications suggest that crop loss is not major,” the bank said. 
Production in India, the world’s second-biggest grower, will be less than previously forecast after excess rainfall curbed harvests in some areas, the Cotton Association said yesterday. 
Supply Shortfall 
Output in China’s Shandong province, the nation’s second- biggest producer, dropped 22 percent this year from 2009 after natural disasters hurt crops, the region’s Agriculture Information Center said in a report Dec. 17. 
Demand in China is forecast to outpace supply by 17 million bales in the year ending July 31, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Stockpiles in the U.S., the world’s biggest supplier, will decline to a 14-year low for the year ending July 31, the USDA said. 
Cotton for September delivery on the Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange rose as much as 2.2 percent from the previous settlement to 29,040 yuan ($4,361) a ton before trading at 28,870 yuan at 1:33 p.m. local time. 
Source: Bloomberg

Govt to allow exports of 2.5m cotton bales


Published on Tue, Dec 21, 2010 at 21:19   |  Updated at Tue, Dec 21, 2010 at 21:21  |  Source : Reuters
India, the world's second-biggest producer and exporter of cotton, will allow exports of 2.5 million bales in 2010-11, Trade Minister Anand Sharma said on Tuesday.
"What had been determined as exportable surplus will not be held back," Sharma told reporters.
India had earlier allowed exports of 5.5 million bales from Nov. 1 to Dec. 15, but exporters managed ship only about 3 million bales.
India is likely to produce more than 32.5 million bales of cotton in 2010/11, topping last year's 29.5 million bales, industry and government officials have said.
(1 bale = 170 kg)


India to provide extra time for cotton exports

20 Dec, 2010, 11.04AM IST,REUTERS 
I
MUMBAI: India, the world's second-biggest producer of cotton, will give exporters more time to ship an alloted 5.5 million bales after they missed this total by a December 15 deadline, two government sources said. 
"Considering the domestic availability of cotton we have decided to give exporters additional time," said a source at the Textile Ministry , who declined to be named, speaking on Sunday. 
India, also the world's second biggest exporter of the fibre, had allowed exports of 5.5 million bales from November 1 to Dec. 15, but exporters failed to ship the entire quantity after unseasonal rains delayed arrivals in the spot market. 
Overseas demand for Indian cotton has increased after bad weather hit crops in China and Pakistan , both leading consumers. 
India is likely to produce more than 32.5 million bales of cotton in 2010/11, higher than last year's 29.5 million bales, industry and government officials have said. Exports so far have been around half the allowed amount after unseasonal rains hit supply and quality. 
"We don't know out of 5.5 million bales how much cotton has been exported. After collecting data from exporters we will decide about the extra time needed to be given to them," the ministry source said. 
Domestic cotton arrivals at Indian spot markets have now picked up after drier weather in December and so far in the 2010/11 season have risen 2.3 percent over a year ago, a senior government official said on December 14. 
Exporters will now have to register with another government body, however. 
"The exporters will have to register contracts with Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) before exports," said a source at the Textile Commissioner's office. 
Previously, exporters only had to register with the Textile Commissioner and the new requirement could lead to delays in the export process.

Kapas zooms on extended buying


Published on December 21, 2010 12:15:00 IST
The kapas futures staged a strong rally on Monday on strong buying interest. 
Last week, Indian government ex-tended deadline for export of cotton till completion of export commitment. This is attracting active buying in spot and futures market. 
Steady arrivals and robust demand had a bullish effect on the market. 
Outlook 
The kapas futures are expected to trade on a positive note on follow through buying supported by strong fundamental factors. 
The central government has extended deadline for export of cotton till completion of export commitment done so far. Earlier, in September, government lifted ban on cotton export and allowed for export of 5.5 million bales by 15th December. 
But, exporters were unable to meet the obligation because of sharp rise in the cotton price. 
Ease in arrival pressure in major markets will also support the prices to trade higher. 
According to Cotton Association of India, cotton production in India would be 34.75 million bales of 170 kg each against previous estimate of 35.7 million tons. The decline in output is due to untimely rains in key producing areas. 
Courtesy: Karvy Commtrade Ltd.

Govt extends deadline for cotton exportersDecember 21, 2010 (India)

The government has finally decided to give more time to cotton exporters who were not able to meet the earlier deadline of December 15, 2010 and ship the volume of cotton they had registered with the Textile Commissioners Office.
The government had permitted 5.5 million bales (1 bale = 170 kg) for export and fixed December 15 as deadline for completing shipments. However as on that date, cotton exporters were able to ship only 3.02 million bales. 
Vide a notification issued on December 16, Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT), said that, it will henceforth register, inspect and certify all future raw cotton exports from India. In August, DGFT had transferred these powers to the Textile Commissioners Office. 
Experts whom fibre2fashion spoke to, are of the opinion that the government has given more time to exporters to calm down the markets as raw cotton prices of cotton had shot up by 12 percent to Rs 42500 / candy (1 candy = 355 kg) after DGFT issued the notification. 
According to the Cotton Association of India which released its news estimates on December 18, the cotton crop is expected to be 34.75 million bales. This estimate is less than the October estimate of 35.7 million bales. 
The unseasonable rains in the cotton growing zones in India during November, particularly floods in Andhra Pradesh have resulted in lowering the crop estimate. The Cotton Advisory Board (CAB) had estimated cotton output in India at 32.5 million bales in October, but is yet to announce the new estimates. 

Fibre2fashion News Desk - India

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Cotton flares 12% on export panic

T E Narasimhan / Chennai December 19, 2010, 0:27 IST
Communication from government misunderstood to mean more exports.
Cotton prices shot up by over 12 per cent to Rs 41,500 per candy on Friday after a communication issued that day by the commerce & industry ministry created panic in the market. It was misunderstood to mean that the government was pushing exports, though the cotton crop has been affected badly by erratic rainfall.
The textile ministry had allowed the export of 5.5 million bales for a period of 45 days which ended on December 15. The communication from the commerce & industry ministry, a copy of which is available with Business Standard, stated that “it was the decision of the group of ministers that 5.5 million bales of cotton should be allowed for export during the cotton season 2010-11”. This, people in the trade felt, was an extension of the deadline of December 15.

The demand for cotton is estimated to be 27.5 to 28 million bales, while the government’s estimate for production is 26.6 million bales
Production has dropped 40 per cent in Andhra Pradesh, 20 per cent in Maharashtra and 15 per cent in Gujarat 
Meanwhile, the demand for cotton is expected to stay buoyant. According to market estimates, 4.3 million spindles are likely to be added by the spinning mills next year
Mills do not want more exports in the near future because that could drive up prices
The textile ministry on Saturday clarified that there was no such extension. Textile Secretary Rita Menon told Business Standard that “the cap was not lifted, and, till December 15, only 3 million bales have been shipped”. However, she added that the government will reopen registration “so that the remaining 2.5 million bales can also be shipped”.
Mills do not want more exports in the near future because that could drive up prices. The demand for cotton is estimated to be 27.5 to 28 million bales, while the government’s estimate for production is 26.6 million bales. This has put pressure on prices. It is estimated that cotton production has dropped 40 per cent in Andhra Pradesh, 20 per cent in Maharashtra and 15 per cent in Gujarat. “Our estimate is that production of 3 million bales has been hit due to the rain; so any further export will create shortage in the months of July, August and September next year, which will result in mills shutting down,” said The Southern India Mills Association Chairman J Thulasidharan.
At the same time, the demand for cotton is expected to stay buoyant. According to market estimates, 4.3 million spindles are likely to be added by the spinning mills in the country next year.
Some mills alleged that because of the commerce & industry ministry’s circular, some foreign buyers have started to place orders for cotton. This, they said, fuelled the price rise on Friday. KPR Mills Managing Director P Nataraj said that exporters too have assumed that the deadline has been extended. This was a miscommunication, though there was no extension of the deadline of December 15.
Meanwhile, the directorate general of foreign trade, the trade arm of the commerce & industry ministry, from now will register cotton export contracts instead of the textiles commissioner, the Friday circular said. No reason was assigned for the switch.

Cotton exports might re-open in 20 days; sentiments pull up prices

18 Dec, 2010, 05.07AM IST,ET Bureau 

COIMBATORE: Cotton prices are looking up in the domestic market as traders feel that the government may soon lift restrictions on export of the commodity. 
The upbeat mood followed a change in modality for registration of cotton. The government on Thursday said cotton will now be registered with the Director General of Foreign Trade instead of the Office of Textile Commissioner in Mumbai. 
The announcement lifted the price of Shankar-6, the benchmark Indian variety, by 2.5% to Rs 41,000 per candy on Friday. 
Cotton prices had tumbled over the past month after the government put a cap on exports of cotton and cotton yarn. But some traders said they were not reading too much into the change in registration process. 
“It is just a change of office for registration,” said Bhadresh Bhai, owner of Bhadresh Cotton Company , the largest cotton exporter in India. “It does not make much of a difference to an exporter.” But he said he expects the government to re-open cotton exports in another two-three weeks as only 30 lakh bales have been shipped out as against the authorized cap of 55 lakh bales. 
On the possibility of extending the 45-day deadline to ship the already registered quota, Bhadresh said the government should penalize and not reward the non-performers. 
“The government is throwing open the remaining quota and anybody including the non-performers can register again. This export policy is mainly to safeguard and get international prices for the farmers. If the government extends time for the non-performers , then farmers will not get good price,” he said. 
Bhadresh Cotton had registered for exporting 4.5 lakh bales. The company said it has shipped the full quantity before the December 15 deadline. 
A Mumbai-based commodity expert said the change in registration process will ensure better coordination between the customs department and the commerce ministry. But he said he was worried about transparency. 
While logistics, procedures and systems will take long time, there might also be problem regarding transparency. So we hope DGFT also opts for online registration,” he said requesting anonymity.

New York cotton nears record

NEW YORK  (December 19, 2010) : US cotton futures rose nearly 3 percent to settle at a one-month peak and near record highs on Friday as speculators plowed into the market on the notion it had run out of new supply in the near-term. "Basically, the projection is that there's very little cotton, if any, to be delivered into the March contract," said Mike Stevens, an independent cotton analyst in Mandeville, Louisiana.

"It's not a new story, but one that is driving this market until we find a way to ration or reduce the demand." But some think cotton could actually fall in the coming week, ending a three-week run-up, if investors decide to take profit ahead of Friday's pre-Christmas holiday.

"Next week is a short week longs may decide to cash in," said Sharon Johnson, senior cotton analyst at commodity brokers Penson Futures in Atlanta, Georgia. The key March cotton contract on ICE Futures US settled up 4.0 cents, or 2.7 percent, at $1.5012 per lb. That took the market to its highest level since November 10, when it hit a record peak of $1.5195.

Cotton has been the best performing commodity in the Reuters-Jefferies commodity index, up over 80 percent year to date. For this week, March cotton was up 10 percent, extending its 22 percent gain from two previous weeks. If supply fears continue, cotton could rally to a new record above $1.60 a lb with some intermittent profit-taking, independent analyst Stevens said. "I'm shooting darts in the dark here, but this is very possible," he said. "You're talking about a market that's doubled in price over the last six months.

Howell: Correction flirtation ends quickly as cotton soars to big advance

Posted: December 19, 2010 - 12:11am
Flirtation with a correction subsided last week as cotton futures soared from an underlying chart gap to within striking distance of a contract high close.
Prices for the week ended Thursday leaped 1,017 points to 146.12 cents in spot March, 837 points to 136.57 cents in May, 494 points to 125.13 cents in July and 239 points to 96.75 cents in new-crop December.
March’s contract high close is 147.11 cents on Nov. 9 and its lifetime high is 151.95 cents on Nov. 10. It filled on Wednesday much of a 198-point chart gap left from Monday’s high of 140.97 and Tuesday’s low of 142.95, then roared up the 400-point limit Thursday and closed two ticks off the session high.
The surge appeared linked mostly to speculative buying as sellers seemed virtually to vanish. Cotton, up over 80 percent in the year to date, is the leading performer in the Reuters-Jefferies commodity index.
Sharon C. Johnson, senior cotton analyst with Penson Futures in Atlanta, said speculative and limited mill buying has been concentrated in March.
“Commercials have moved their activity to May or July as mills are pricing farther out and are rolling short March holdings forward,” she said. “It is this activity on the part of specs and hedgers that explains the ongoing widening difference of March over May and July.”
Cash grower sales on The Seam slowed to 38,797 bales from 57,212 bales the previous week. Prices jumped 713 points to average 138.22 cents, reflecting a 792-point leap to 83.59 cents in premiums over loan redemption rates.
World values as measured by the Cotlook A Index hit a new all-time high at 173.30 cents at midweek, topping the prior record high of 172.40 cents on Nov. 10, and slipped Thursday morning to 171.35 cents after futures had cooled from overheated conditions on Wednesday.
The index gained 1,065 points for the week. A couple of U.S. growths, including Texas cotton, have remained at or near the top two slots among the world’s five most competitive.
In the news, a government report on U.S. retail sales suggested a strong start to the holiday shopping season for cotton goods.
Retail sales of clothing-accessories jumped 2.7 percent in November, according to Commerce Department data. October sales were revised up to a 1.2 percent gain from a previously reported increase of 0.7 percent.
Receipts at clothing and clothing accessories stores, among the strongest components of the report, showed the largest increase for this category since March.
Total retail sales increased 0.8 percent, exceeding a gain of 0.6 percent expected by economists polled by Reuters. Sales for October were revised up to 1.7 percent from a previously reported 1.2 percent gain.
U.S. all-cotton export sales for this season and next came in below expectations but stayed stout at 258,300 running bales for the week ended Dec. 9, though down from 436,600 bales the week before. Current-crop commitments hit 13.558 million bales, 89 percent of the USDA forecast.
All-cotton shipments dipped to 324,700 running bales, with upland exports down 6 percent from the previous week but up 44 percent from the prior four-week average. Shipments of around 362,400 running bales a week are needed to reach the USDA estimate.
Exports for the season of 3.347 million running bales, up 8.5 percent from a year ago, have amounted to around 22 percent of the USDA forecast, compared with about 26 percent of final shipments at the corresponding point last season. About 25 percent of the commitments have been shipped.
On the international scene, a rough estimate suggested India’s 2010-11 exports totaled 2.5 million to 3 million bales (375 pounds) as of Wednesday, Seshadri Ramkumar of Texas Tech, said in a report. Wednesday was the deadline for cotton exporters to ship an allowable 5.5 million bales.
Sources noted it was clear the export limit was not reached, said India-born Ramkumar, who has collaborated with India in textiles.
Textile Commissioner A.B. Joshi indicated in a telephone conversation the government would not be in a position to make a decision on shipment of the shortfall until it gets actual export data from ports, Ramkumar said. It could be the end of January when a decision is made, he added. It was believed the Cotton Advisory Board’s 32.5-million-bale crop estimate could be met.
Export issues will be settled at a central ministerial meeting of the departments of agriculture, textiles, commerce and finance.
Meanwhile, trend-following funds bought a net 1,747 lots in cotton futures with options during the week ended Dec. 7 to boost their net longs to 42,530 lots, according to the latest supplemental traders-commitments data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
This marked the second week in a row they have been net buyers and followed four consecutive weeks of net selling that reduced their net long futures-options position to the lowest since Aug. 3.
Index funds sold a net 705 lots to inch their net longs down to 61,201 lots and traders with non-reportable positions shaved their net long holdings by 909 lots to 8,315.
Commercials increased their outright shorts by 6,914 lots and their outright longs by 6,782 lots. This edged their net shorts up a marginal 132 lots to 112,046.
Updated USDA supply-demand estimates showed U.S. ending stocks falling to 1.9 million bales, lowest since 1924-25, and a 1.19-million-bale increase from a month ago to 43.39 million in the world carryout, still the lowest in 15 years and the fourth consecutive year of decline.