Daily Newsletter

07 November 2023

Daily Newsletter

07 November 2023

Surge in 2023/24 cotton production to push global reserves to all-time high

The International Cotton Advisory Committee (ICAC) projects global cotton reserves will reach the highest level ever recorded in its 83-year history of data collection, with China’s 23/24 stocks expected to rise to 9.16m tonnes.

Isatou Ndure November 06 2023

Global cotton production for the 2023/24 season is expected to rise by 3% to 25.41m tonnes, while consumption is anticipated to decrease by 0.43% to 23.35m tonnes.

As a result, global cotton stocks are poised to jump by 10%, following a 9% increase in the previous season (2022-2023), reaching 23.32m tonnes.

China is expecting a large jump to 9.16m tonnes and the rest of the world's warehouses are also expected to swell to 14.5 million tonnes, indicating that there will be a substantial surplus of cotton production in the global market.

The surplus is projected to have an impact on the Cotlook A-Index, which aims to be representative of the level of offering prices on the international raw cotton market. It is anticipated to remain within the range of 85 to 95 cents per pound for the remainder of the 2023/24 season.

The global stock-to-use ratio is anticipated to increase to 1.00, equivalent to approximately 12 months of mill use. Furthermore, the global average yield for the 2023/24 season is expected to remain stable at 771 kg per hectare.

The ICAC says that given average cotton prices and weakening demand, slight decreases in planted area would be expected, but total planted area is projected to be 32.2 million hectares, which is what it describes as a "perplexing" 2% increase over the previous season.

Sustainable cotton initiative, Better Cotton reported that 22% of global cotton production was Better Cotton in 2021-2022, as it prepared to launch its new traceability solution earlier this month (November).

In 2021, Global cotton production was poised to show a 6% year-over-year increase versus 2020/21, with the surge led by three of the world's top five producers at the time — the US, Brazil, and Pakistan. 

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