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Cotton's Slide: Why Prices Fell And What's Really Driving It
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Cotton futures just touched a six-month low, with the key ICE December contract dipping below 65 cents per pound before settling in the mid-60s.
On the surface, it looks like a routine market wobble. The real story is a tug-of-war between swelling supply and hesitant buyers-plus the currency and commodity currents around them.
First, supply. Harvests in China, Brazil, and the United States are coming in larger, pushing more fiber toward export channels at the same time.
Brazil-now among the world's top shippers after a rapid expansion in Mato Grosso and Bahia-has the logistics and scale to move cotton quickly. U.S. production is steady enough to keep warehouses comfortable into the shipping window, and China 's output is up.
Now, demand. Buying has been patchy, especially from Chinese mills, which have trimmed U.S. purchases amid uneven downstream orders. A strong U.S. dollar makes American bales pricier in global terms, nudging mills toward Brazil and other origins.
Weekly U.S. export sales, a closely watched pulse check, haven't shown the kind of consistent strength that would spark a durable rebound.
There's also the mood music from grains. Soybeans and corn have been under pressure, and when broader agricultural sentiment sours, cotton often trades in sympathy.
Even if global textile use roughly matches production over the full season, near-term arrivals from big harvests can still swamp the market and cap rallies.
Why this matters beyond farm country: cheaper cotton can lower input costs for apparel, but any benefit is filtered through exchange rates, shipping, and how brands manage inventories.
For Brazilian producers, the export engine is strong, yet futures under 65 cents squeeze margins where yields or fiber quality disappointed. For U.S. exporters, the currency headwind and Brazil's competitiveness are real hurdles.
The bottom line is simple: more cotton is arriving just as big buyers hesitate. Until import demand-particularly from China-shows clearer traction and U.S. export bookings firm up, prices are likely to stay heavy, with non-U.S. origins holding a pricing edge.
On the surface, it looks like a routine market wobble. The real story is a tug-of-war between swelling supply and hesitant buyers-plus the currency and commodity currents around them.
First, supply. Harvests in China, Brazil, and the United States are coming in larger, pushing more fiber toward export channels at the same time.
Brazil-now among the world's top shippers after a rapid expansion in Mato Grosso and Bahia-has the logistics and scale to move cotton quickly. U.S. production is steady enough to keep warehouses comfortable into the shipping window, and China 's output is up.
Now, demand. Buying has been patchy, especially from Chinese mills, which have trimmed U.S. purchases amid uneven downstream orders. A strong U.S. dollar makes American bales pricier in global terms, nudging mills toward Brazil and other origins.
Weekly U.S. export sales, a closely watched pulse check, haven't shown the kind of consistent strength that would spark a durable rebound.
There's also the mood music from grains. Soybeans and corn have been under pressure, and when broader agricultural sentiment sours, cotton often trades in sympathy.
Even if global textile use roughly matches production over the full season, near-term arrivals from big harvests can still swamp the market and cap rallies.
Why this matters beyond farm country: cheaper cotton can lower input costs for apparel, but any benefit is filtered through exchange rates, shipping, and how brands manage inventories.
For Brazilian producers, the export engine is strong, yet futures under 65 cents squeeze margins where yields or fiber quality disappointed. For U.S. exporters, the currency headwind and Brazil's competitiveness are real hurdles.
The bottom line is simple: more cotton is arriving just as big buyers hesitate. Until import demand-particularly from China-shows clearer traction and U.S. export bookings firm up, prices are likely to stay heavy, with non-U.S. origins holding a pricing edge.

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