International cotton trade is expected to shrink in the year 2004-05 as current high prices are expected to restrain consumption. |
The International Cotton Advisory Committee (ICAC), an association of 42 cotton producing and consuming countries, said planting for 2004-05 was starting with international prices at their highest level, at this period of the year, since 1997. Higher prices will stimulate production but restrain consumption. |
ICAC felt tightening world supply and record imports by China would take the Cotlook A Index to 75 cents per pound in 2003-04, up 19 cents (34 per cent) from the previous season. World production would be a record 22.2 million tons in 2004-05, up 2 million tons or 10 per cent from 2003-04. |
Production in China was expected to rebound from 4.9 million tons in 2003/04 to a record of 6.3 million tons next season. But US production may slip 2 per cent to 3.9 million tons, partly due to competition from soybeans. |
Cotton was not price-competitive with chemical fibers, despite the recent increase in crude oil prices. As a result, world cotton mill use is expected to stagnate in 2003-04 and increase by less than 1 per cent in 2004-05, to an estimated 21.3 million tons. Mill use outside China may fall 1 per cent to 14 million tons in 2004/05. Consumption in China would rise 5 per cent to 7.3 million tons, 34 per cent of the world total. |
Fuelled by China's imports, exports may gain 7 per cent in 2003-04, surpassing 7 million tons for the first time. US exports may touch a record 3 million tons, with its share in world exports at 42 per cent, the highest since 1960-61. |
The gap between production and use in China was expected to shrink to 1 million tons in 2004-05. Imports by China may decline from 1.65 million tons projected this season to 1.35 million tons in 2004-05. |
World exports may decline to 6.4 million tons in 2004-05. US exports may dip to 2.5 million tons. With production expected to outpace mill use and reduced imports by China in 2004/05, the Cotlook A Index is projected to fall to 64 cents per pound, down 11 cents or 15 per cent from the projected average for 2003-04. |