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Cotton Squeeze Sends Prices to Highest Since '14 as Options Jump

Cotton Squeeze Sends Prices to Highest Since '14 as Options Jump

(Bloomberg) -- Cotton prices extended a rally to the highest since June 2014 amid buoyant demand for U.S. exports and signs of a squeeze on July futures. Bullish options jumped for the second straight session as volume surged.

On ICE Futures U.S. in New York, cotton futures for July delivery climbed 3.14 cents, or 3.8 percent, to close at 85.32 cents a pound at 2:29 p.m. Earlier, the price surged by the expanded exchange limit of 5 cents to 87.18 cents, the highest for the most-active contract since June 4, 2014. Aggregate volume rose to an estimated record 107,101 contracts. The U.S. is the world’s top exporter.

Cotton Squeeze Sends Prices to Highest Since '14 as Options Jump

Through May 4, U.S. export shipments in the season that ends July 31 have climbed 76 percent to the highest in six years, according to government data. Unfixed cotton call positions, measuring the quantity of calls bought or sold on which the price has not been fixed, have more than doubled from a year earlier, Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show.

“It really comes down to tight available supply, and the mills trying to get the coverage that they need,” Arlan Suderman, the chief commodities economist at INTL FCStone in Kansas City, Missouri, said in a telephone interview. “Exports have been really strong, much stronger than what was anticipated.”

Merchandisers sold a lot of cotton forward and never “fixed” the price, and they now face a rising market with short positions, Jim Nunn, president of Nunn Cotton Co. in Brownville, Tennessee, said in a telephone interview. July is the last contract of the marketing year.

The tight domestic supply may not last. U.S. production is expected to climb 12 percent in the season that begins Aug. 1, with stockpiles at the end of the season surging 56 percent to 5 million bales, the U.S. Department of Agriculture forecast last week. Futures for December delivery settled at 75.06 cents, 12 percent below the July contract.

World inventory is forecast to shrink for the third straight year amid falling stockpiles in China, the largest consumer. “The government is expected to continue policies that have led to a significant reduction in their stocks in recent years,” the USDA said in a report last week. China has been auctioning off reserves in recent months.

On May 12, the July 85 cent call soared fivefold to 2.09 cents on record contract volume of 11,726, the most-active in the session. Futures jumped by the usual limit of 3 cents.

On Monday, combined volume of the three most-active call options topped 10,700. The July 90 cent call was the most-active at an estimated volume of 5,215, and the price jumped to 1.44 cents from 0.9 cent on May 12 and 0.11 cent on May 11.

A measure of 60-day futures volatility rose to the highest since November.

To contact the reporters on this story: Shruti Date Singh in Chicago at ssingh28@bloomberg.net, Megan Durisin in Chicago at mdurisin1@bloomberg.net, Jeff Wilson in Chicago at jwilson29@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Simon Casey at scasey4@bloomberg.net, Patrick McKiernan, Millie Munshi