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May cocoa fell to a fresh 6 1/2 month low yesterday. The market closed at the lowest settlement price since August leaving long-term downside price risk in place. With the fundamental outlook turning increasingly bearish, eventually we see May cocoa falling back towards the $2,600 price level. However, based purely on technical signals, May cocoa may be able to stage a bit of a recovery soon given the market’s extreme oversold condition. We don’t expect this to be much more than a dead cat bounce since a bearish long-term chart formation, a rising supply outlook and lack of investor interest will likely combine to keep the market’s downtrend in tact. May cocoa set a double top at the December and January highs and retracement targets of the contract low (November 2008) to high range are at $2,748 and then $2,567. The odds of the market continuing to trend lower seem to have improved yesterday after the ICCO forecasted a bearish shift in the market’s fundamental setup for next season. The ICCO’s executive director is forecasting a global cocoa surplus of as much as 90,000 tonnes for the 2010/11 season compared to an 18,000 tonne cocoa deficit predicted for 2009/10. The ICCO sees global cocoa output rising by 5% next season and at twice the growth rate of global grindings citing the likelihood that high cocoa prices, which hit a 32 year high in the NY market in January, will promote higher production under normal weather conditions. It is interesting to note that the cocoa market’s dip to a new low for the move yesterday apparently didn’t attract any fresh industry buying. Perhaps after the ICCO predicted a much higher forecast for the Ivory Coast mid-crop of between 310,000 and 320,000 tonnes, chocolate manufacturers may decide to stay on the sidelines in anticipation of lower prices into the April harvest which could leave the cocoa market without a strong price floor. ICE cocoa warehouse stocks stand at 4.540 million bags, down 7,499 bags.
TODAY’S GUIDANCE: The cocoa market remains highly influenced by the currency trade and with the Pound under pressure in the early overnight action it leaves May cocoa at risk of retesting yesterday’s low. Currency influences may need to turn more supportive before any significant technical bounce in cocoa is seen.
TODAY’S MARKET IDEAS: While we see the trend continuing down, traders also need to be mindful that cocoa is overdue for a technical bounce and short position holders may want to have trailing profit stops in place.
Cocoa Market Commentary – 2010.03.10
by Terry Roggensack on March 10, 2010
Below is a sample of our Daily Commentary. To get this comment, and our daily coverage of 15 additional markets and trade ideas, visit futures-research.com for your free 2 week trial!
May cocoa fell to a fresh 6 1/2 month low yesterday. The market closed at the lowest settlement price since August leaving long-term downside price risk in place. With the fundamental outlook turning increasingly bearish, eventually we see May cocoa falling back towards the $2,600 price level. However, based purely on technical signals, May cocoa may be able to stage a bit of a recovery soon given the market’s extreme oversold condition. We don’t expect this to be much more than a dead cat bounce since a bearish long-term chart formation, a rising supply outlook and lack of investor interest will likely combine to keep the market’s downtrend in tact. May cocoa set a double top at the December and January highs and retracement targets of the contract low (November 2008) to high range are at $2,748 and then $2,567. The odds of the market continuing to trend lower seem to have improved yesterday after the ICCO forecasted a bearish shift in the market’s fundamental setup for next season. The ICCO’s executive director is forecasting a global cocoa surplus of as much as 90,000 tonnes for the 2010/11 season compared to an 18,000 tonne cocoa deficit predicted for 2009/10. The ICCO sees global cocoa output rising by 5% next season and at twice the growth rate of global grindings citing the likelihood that high cocoa prices, which hit a 32 year high in the NY market in January, will promote higher production under normal weather conditions. It is interesting to note that the cocoa market’s dip to a new low for the move yesterday apparently didn’t attract any fresh industry buying. Perhaps after the ICCO predicted a much higher forecast for the Ivory Coast mid-crop of between 310,000 and 320,000 tonnes, chocolate manufacturers may decide to stay on the sidelines in anticipation of lower prices into the April harvest which could leave the cocoa market without a strong price floor. ICE cocoa warehouse stocks stand at 4.540 million bags, down 7,499 bags.
TODAY’S GUIDANCE: The cocoa market remains highly influenced by the currency trade and with the Pound under pressure in the early overnight action it leaves May cocoa at risk of retesting yesterday’s low. Currency influences may need to turn more supportive before any significant technical bounce in cocoa is seen.
TODAY’S MARKET IDEAS: While we see the trend continuing down, traders also need to be mindful that cocoa is overdue for a technical bounce and short position holders may want to have trailing profit stops in place.
Tags: Cocoa, Softs
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