Indian
cotton traders have cancelled contracts to export some 400,000 bales of the
fibre after a rally in domestic prices and the rising rupee made overseas sales
unattractive, the president of the Cotton Association of India told Reuters.The
switch, triggering penalty payments by traders, has left cotton buyers in
leading markets like Bangladesh, Vietnam and China seeking to make up
shortfalls by tapping suppliers in the United States, Australia and Brazil,
said association head Atul Ganatra.
The
cancellations and higher local prices could cut India''s exports to 5 million
bales, each of 170 kg, in the 2017/18 marketing year started on Oct. 1 - nearly
a quarter below an initial estimate, Ganatra said. Prices surged more than 15
percent in the past six weeks after pest infestations squeezed supplies in the
world''s biggest producer of the fibre."Some exports contracts for
Bangladesh, Vietnam and China could not be fulfilled due to the sudden rise
local prices," Ganatra said. He didn''t identify the traders who cancelled
export deals in moves confirmed by six dealers contacted by Reuters.
After hurricanes raised doubts about the supplies from top exporter U.S. late
last year, Indian traders signed a flurry of contracts.Indian traders have so
far shipped 1.5 million bales of the 2.5 million bales contracted since Oct. 1,
when the current year began, dealers said. Last year India exported 5.8 million
bales of cotton.The country''s traders are offering cotton to Asian buyers at
around 87 cents per pound, including cost insurance and freight, nearly 4
percent more than rival supplies from the U.S., the dealers said.
But
India has struggled to keep supplies steady after infestations of pests like
pink boll worms cut output, lifting domestic prices to 87 cents per lb.Also,
the Indian rupee recently rallied to its highest level in 30 months, further
slashing exporters'' margins and making it difficult for most merchants to stick
to their export commitments, said Vinay Kotak, a director at Kotak Commodities,
a Mumbai-based brokerage.
Depleting
supplies from India have also led to a shortage in the global market, lifting
international prices to their highest level in 3-1/2 years - and helping the
United States, Brazil and some other key suppliers increase their market share,
especially in Asia."The mills have to go somewhere else to import
cotton," said Peter Egli, director of risk management at British merchant
Plexus Cotton. "They will come to the U.S., West Africa, and later to
Australia and Brazil. Those are the main origin points."
The U.S. has committed to sell 678,720 bales of cotton to Bangladesh so far
this season, more than double the quantity sold a year earlier, according to
the U.S. Department of Agriculture.Bangladesh had emerged as a big buyer of
Indian cotton thanks to competitive prices and lower freight costs, sourcing
nearly half of its annual import requirement of 7 million bales from India."But now we are in trouble, as many of our
contracts with India got stuck over a sudden jump in prices," said
Muhammad Ayub, finance director at the Bangladesh Cotton Association.
Source: Live Mint, India Friday, 12 January 2018