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Riding Out Cotton’s Flooded Market

By Beck Barnes

There is a theme emerging in Joe Nicosia’s annual economic updates, delivered each year at the Mid-South Farm and Gin Show in Memphis, TN. When it comes to global supply and demand, it seems Nicosia finds corollaries in natural disasters. For the U.S. cotton industry, that is not a comforting thought.

Take, for example, the speech he delivered last year. Nicosia, the global platform head for cotton at Louis Dreyfus Commodities, began his address in February 2015 by likening China’s massive cotton reserves to a dormant volcano.

“So life can be peaceful under the volcano for a period of time, as long as it doesn’t erupt,” he said. “And if it does, that lava – that cotton – can flow slowly, sometimes ooze out into the market place. Or it can erupt, and we can get flooded with it.”

Over the last year, that volcano of Chinese cotton stocks did begin to flow out into the market, severely suppressing world cotton prices along the way. There are rumors that 2016 could see a more severe eruption out of China, as well.

During the 2016 economic update, Nicosia likened these developments to another natural disaster – a flood.

“Little by little the tide is turning,” he said, acknowledging how the market is now flooded with cotton. “It’s going to take a little bit of time to get in and get out. But let’s see what’s left when the water recedes.”

How Did We Get Here?

Addressing a crowd of hundreds of Mid-South cotton professionals, Nicosia explained how we arrived at cotton prices that have languished between the high 50-cent and mid 60-cent range for the past year. The factors that led us to such suppressed prices, he said, began in 2011, when the Chinese government implemented a policy of buying and storing massive cotton stocks in response to then-skyrocketing cotton prices.

“The Chinese cotton policies have had, and are going to continue to have, a huge impact on the world and be a drag on prices,” Nicosia said.

From 2011 to 2014 the Chinese government executed a policy of paying domestic farmers prices that far exceeded the global market, encouraging domestic production while propping up the rural Chinese economy. While that cotton began to fill Chinese warehouses, the country also imported large amounts, becoming the leading export destination for U.S. cotton.

During this period, the policy gave a boost – albeit an artificial one – to the global futures contracts. Because China withheld the vast majority of the cotton it took from the global market, world stocks were effectively tightened. In reality, however, the Chinese were eventually going to have to offload their reserve stocks.

The Chinese began that process, while changing their underlying cotton policy, in 2015. Because the government had bought cotton from domestic producers at elevated prices, and because those same stocks had sat in reserve for years, all the while reducing quality, the Chinese will ultimately lose “tens of billions of dollars” while liquidating their reserve, according to Nicosia. Nonetheless, the government is forced to move forward with the planned draw down of cotton reserves.

“The volcano is ready to go,” Nicosia said. “The elephant in the room is the Chinese state reserve. It was at 50 million bales, it’s down to about 45 million already. They’ve liquidated some. They own half the world’s stock.”

As an influx of cotton hits the world market, prices naturally decline. The result is that fewer acres of cotton will be planted around the globe in 2016. If there is a silver lining to suppressed prices in 2016, it is that natural laws of economics – supply and demand – will once again drive decisions. By causing significant reductions in acreage, the market, as Nicosia puts it, is doing its job.

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