The market tested and successfully held the important 82 cents support level when it briefly dipped to an intra-day low of 81.42 cents on December 23rd. By holding support the market managed to attract additional spec buying, which prompted it to rally above 85 cents in the last four sessions, although its highest close has so far been 84.66 cents on December 27.
The CFTC report as of December 24 revealed that speculators continued to expand their net long position by another 4’617 contracts to around 2.8 million bales net, while Index traders added 3’134 lots to their net long position for a total of 6.7 million bales. The trade is as usual on the other side of the ledger with a rather large 9.5 million bales net short position, after adding another 7’751 contracts during the week before Christmas.
A part of this large trade net short position seems to be tied to the sizeable amount of unfixed on-call sales, which as of December 27 amounted to 54’731 contracts or about 5.5 million bales, of which nearly 5.0 million bales are based on current crop March, May and July futures.
Mills continue to secure supplies at a rapid pace as evidenced by the latest US export sales report, yet many of them are deciding to leave the price open, hoping for the market to give them an opportunity to fix at a lower level.