July 20, 2006
Low Cotton Prices Offer a Different Hedging Opportunity
Writer: Blair Fannin, 979-845-2259,b-fannin@tamu.edu
Contact: Dr. John Robinson, 979-845-8011,jrcr@tamu.edu
COLLEGE STATION – Severe drought that has decimated portions of Texas'
cotton crop is causing many growers to evaluate insurance alternatives.
One alternative is to hedge the risk to countercyclical payments using
the futures market, said a Texas Cooperative Extension expert.
"December futures slipped below 55 cents in late June," said Dr. John
Robinson, Extension cotton marketing economist. "While this isn't a good
thing for growers, it does present a viable situation for hedging
countercyclical payments. If futures rise above 56 cents, countercyclical
payments begin to erode at that point."
Hedging countercyclical payments is a timely move, Robinson said, as
many growers don't have cotton in the fields. With the recent dip in the
cotton futures market, buying a 56-cent call option is "reasonably
affordable."
"It's like buying some inexpensive insurance," Robinson said.
After record-setting production in Texas the past two years, the 2006
crop is shaping up to be one of the worst. Texas cotton yielded 8.44
million bales in 2005, but half that harvest amount is predicted this
year.
"It's just going to be a huge drop from the previous year," Robinson
said.
The scenario is much like the one caused by the 1998 drought, only the
weather and crop conditions appear to be worse, Robinson said.
Coupled with U.S. Department of Agriculture projections of lower
2006-2007 stocks and a possible 5 percent to 7 percent reduction in
domestic stocks-to-use, Robinson said the potential is ripe for December
2006 futures to trade higher than the December 2005 contract. Those
contracts peaked in the upper 50-cent range, he said.
"I think it's reasonable to see the December '06 contracts reach the
low 60s, with the biggest caveat being on the demand side," Robinson said.
Harvest forecasts of 20-plus million bales are predicted nationally
this year, and abandonment rates could eclipse more than 15 percent,
Robinson said.
"If that happens, it all boils down to a forecast for higher prices,"
he said.
Cotton producers can stay updated with current market trends on the
Web. Robinson distributes a weekly cotton marketing planner newsletter at
http://agecon2.tamu.edu/people/faculty/robinson-john/index.html.
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