Why Volatile Cotton Could Be A Buying Opportunity Now

 | Jun 30, 2020 21:48

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • US-China trade weighs on the price of the fluffy fiber
  • 2020 markets look a lot like 2008
  • Oversupply leads to the bottom-end of pricing cycles in commodities

Cotton is perhaps one of the most volatile commodities to trade on the futures exchange. Since 1972, the price of the fluffy fiber has traded from a low of 26.44 cents to as high as $2.27 per pound. The leading cotton-producing countries in the world are China, India, the United States, and Pakistan. China and India are the leading consumers.

Each year, weather conditions in producing nations determine the size of the crop. However, 2020 has been anything but typical.

The global pandemic has weighed on the demand side of the equation, as has the ongoing trade friction between the US and China. Cotton is a member of the soft commodities sector of the asset class. Cotton futures trade on the Intercontinental Exchange. The price was just below 60 cents per pound at the end of last week on the now active month December futures contract. 

h2 US-China trade weighs on the price/h2

In early January 2020, optimism over the “phase one” trade deal between the US and China lifted the price of nearby cotton futures on the Intercontinental Exchange to almost 72 cents per pound.