Global Cotton Market Faces Tightening Stocks but Mixed Demand Signals
Concise May 2026 cotton market analysis: prices, USDA outlook, global stocks, demand signals, weather risks, and short-term trading strategies.
Prices & Market Mood
ICE July 2026 cotton futures are consolidating just below recent highs, with trade over the past week characterized by a short-lived push higher, sideways action, and a pullback as speculators booked profits and buyers balked at loftier levels. The market is still trading near the upper end of the past year’s range, reflecting tighter forward fundamentals despite near-term volatility.
In India, spot prices have firmed as the Cotton Corporation of India has sold close to 5 million bales in about a month, with domestic values rising from roughly EUR 390 to around EUR 410 per candy equivalent, supported by mill buying and reduced farmer selling at lower levels. This uptrend contrasts with last season’s surplus-driven weakness and underlines a narrower local balance sheet.
Supply & Demand Balance
USDA’s May global outlook projects 2026/27 cotton ending stocks at about 71.8 million bales, down around 7% from 2025/26, as world production falls to roughly 116 million bales while mill use rises to nearly 122 million bales. The key driver is a broad-based production decline across most major exporters except India, combined with modest demand growth in leading spinning hubs such as China and India.
Global trade is expected to edge slightly lower year on year, with U.S. shipments facing particular headwinds from weaker export sales recently, including a sharp drop in both Upland and Pima bookings in early May. This soft export performance, plus rising ICE certified stocks, suggests that some importers are rationing purchases at current price levels and may wait for dips.
Fundamentals & Regional Highlights
USDA’s latest projections imply that consumption will exceed production in 2026/27, drawing down stocks and providing a medium-term floor under prices. At the same time, elevated inventories carried from the large 2024/25 crop in several origins still offer a buffer against immediate supply shocks, preventing an overly aggressive price spike for now.
Regionally, India is expected to be one of the few major producers increasing output, helped by relatively stable acreage and technology gains, which partially offsets declines elsewhere. However, the firming of domestic prices in recent weeks indicates that higher production is being balanced by robust mill use and policy-driven stock releases, rather than creating a heavy surplus. Meanwhile, in the U.S., weaker export pace and weather uncertainties in key cotton belts inject additional variability into forward balance sheets.
Weather & Short-Term Risks
Weather conditions across parts of the U.S. Southern Plains and western cotton belt have been drier and warmer than usual, raising concerns about early-season crop establishment and yield potential if moisture deficits persist into the main growing window. While it is too early to materially downgrade the U.S. crop, this pattern adds risk premia into new-crop pricing.
In contrast, no major new weather disruptions have emerged in other key producers over the past few days, and USDA’s May baseline remains the primary reference for 2026/27 global production. As planting progresses in the Northern Hemisphere, weekly crop-condition and precipitation updates will become increasingly important in shaping yield expectations and, by extension, price volatility.
Trading Outlook & Strategy
- Importers/spinners: Use current dips below recent highs to extend nearby and Q4 2026 coverage, focusing on staggered purchasing rather than large one-off buys, as global stocks are projected to tighten but short-term demand signals remain fragile.
- Producers: Consider incremental hedging on further rallies, especially if local cash prices in EUR terms move back toward recent peaks, given the combination of supportive 2026/27 fundamentals and softening export demand indicators.
- Traders/speculators: Bias toward a buy-on-dips approach, but respect growing two-way risk: weakening U.S. export data and rising certified stocks argue against chasing breakouts, while declining global stocks and weather risk favor maintaining a modest long-core exposure.
3‑Day Directional Price Indication (EUR)
*Indicative EUR conversions based on recent USD prices and prevailing FX rates; for guidance only.