Below is a sample of The Hightower Report’s 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!
The weak technical action yesterday has left the cotton market vulnerable to increased speculative long liquidation selling today. Yesterday’s outside day down is seen as a negative technical development. Large and small speculators combined still held a net long position of 47,436 contracts as of September 6th. More cancellations in the weekly export sales report and weakness in the grain markets were seen as forces that drove the market sharply lower yesterday. Weekly export sales for cotton came in showing cancellations of 171,300 running bales for the current marketing year and net sales of 36,600 for the next marketing year for a total net cancellation of 134,700 bales. China was noted as canceling 200,000 bales. Cumulative cotton sales stand at 56.7% of the USDA forecast for 2011/12 (current) marketing year versus a 5 year average of 33.6%. Sales of 102,000 running bales are needed each week to reach the USDA forecast. Chinese futures were down 0.7% overnight, and the US market could attract more end-of-week selling today. A big crop in India will likely cause increased competition for exports this year, and the larger crop in China is expected to help limit the import demand. The market is technically overbought after the recent strong gains.
TODAY’S GUIDANCE: Selling resistance for December cotton comes in at 112.72 and 114.30, with 106.96 and 104.33 as initial support.

Sugar: Bigger Crops in Europe, India and Thailand Should Increase Export Competition
by Terry Roggensack on September 16, 2011
Below is a sample of The Hightower Report’s 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!
Outside market forces look a bit more negative for sugar today with a strong US dollar and weakness in energy and equity markets, and we would think that the market may be poised for a resumption of the recent downtrend. Tightness in the cash market due to lower Brazilian production has supported the futures in recent months, but traders see the need to absorb a large northern hemisphere crop as a negative force. Bigger crops in Europe, India and Thailand should increase the competition for the export market, and Russia’s import needs look to be much smaller. March sugar closed slightly higher on the session yesterday after choppy and two-sided trade. The market saw some weakness into the mid-day, led by a sell-off in the October contracts in New York and London. Traders see deliveries of nearly 100,000 tonnes for London October futures. Strength in the stock market and a positive tilt to the energy markets helped to pull the market off of the mid-session lows, and March sugar’s close matched its highest since September 2nd. The discount of March to October may have helped support the March contract in recent days. Traders will monitor the flooding in Thailand to see if there is an impact on the cane crop. India mills have secured permits to export 213,250 tonnes of sugar out of the 500,000 tonnes that the government allowed last month. Russia produced 615,500 tonnes of refined sugar from beets through September 12th, compared with 352,800 tonnes by the same date last year. Russia may be in a position to produce 5.3 million tonnes this season, up from 2.7 million last year, and this will likely limit their import needs.
TODAY’S GUIDANCE: The recent ten day consolidation appears to be a continuation pattern and we would expect the market to break-out to the downside soon. March sugar resistance is at 28.18 and 28.50, with 26.46 and 25.85 as next support levels.