Spinning mills likely to revive with trending lower cotton prices

Cotton prices in India have been trending lower in recent months and it is likely to remain low for a while for several reasons which is a big concern for cotton growers, but spinners are finding the going good after a long-drawn struggle endured over many quarters. Sankar-6 grade cotton is selling at Rs107 per kg, far lower than the high of Rs130-140 per kg touched in August.

The forecast that cotton prices are likely to remain low is the 9% increase in cotton output to 37.7 million bales expected during the current cotton year. One bale is 170kg. Also some northern states are likely to see a bumper crop, while southern states’ output was hurt by pest attacks and untimely winter rains.

On the whole, higher acreage came under cotton cultivation as the past two years had seen cotton prices steadily rising, albeit on account of lower output. Besides, the poor quality of the output this time may keep a tight lid on prices.

In fact, both domestic and global conditions are supporting a downtrend in cotton prices. Global cotton production is on an upswing. After a partial recovery in calendar year 2017 from a 13-year low in 2016, global output is estimated to pick up, growing by a healthy 11-13% in 2018.

Any improved momentum in imports by China may support a recovery in global cotton prices. China’s subdued import of cotton, following a knee-jerk policy change designed to support the domestic industry, had upset the price cycle in international markets. China is among the leading consumers of cotton and cotton yarn.

With news of higher output following the harvest in October, cotton prices are trending lower. Certainly, low cotton prices bring succour for the spinning industry, which has posted weak sales growth and profit margins for the last four quarters.

In a report, credit rating agency Icra Ltd traces the reasons for pressure in spinning mills. In the quarter ended September 2016, the volumes were affected because of a sharp decline in exports to China, the note ban impact affected volumes in the following quarter. After a narrow window of demand recovery thereafter with conclusion of Chinese cotton auctions, demand pressures reverted from March 2017 onwards.

And of course, the vagaries of the goods and services tax because of a multitude of stages in the textile production chain, adversely effected production and demand for yarn in the last two quarters.

Recent Posts

M&S, Pilio launch initiative to support cotton farming in India

Marks & Spencer and Pilio have launched the Affordable Clean Environment (ACE) cotton programme to support cotton farmers in India.

6 hours ago

Circulose, Spinnova partner to strengthen textile recycling

Circulose has joined the ecosystem of Spinnova to support the commercial scale-up of Spinnova’s fibre technology by supplying recycled raw…

6 hours ago

AGY, JPS Composite Materials to produce glass fiber fabric

AGY, JPS Composite Materials to manufacture low coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) glass fibre fabric developed for advanced integrated circuit…

6 hours ago

Ocean Recherche advances marine biomass materials for textiles

Ocean Recherche is promoting marine biomass as its main raw material for textile applications, supplying a range of materials developed…

4 days ago

Asahi Kasei restarts Bemberg production at Nobeoka facility

Asahi Kasei has resumed production of Bemberg at its Nobeoka facility in Japan, almost four years after a partial shutdown.

4 days ago

Nikwax, Gill Marine introduce water-tepellent technology for ocean gear

Nikwax has partnered with technical marine clothing brand Gill Marine to introduce PFAS-free durable water-repellent technology to ocean performance gear.

4 days ago