Monday, 28 February 2011 at 15:38, Reuters, Beijing
Chinese and US cotton futures hit their upward trading limits on Monday, with speculators blamed at least in part for driving up prices that were already rising because of low supply and high demand. China's benchmark Zhengzhou cotton futures rose 7 per cocent to touch the daily trading limit of 32,435 yuan per tonne. "We believe the price has been pushed up by (speculative) funds. For the physical market, both cotton and yarn prices have not changed that much or are even slightly down," said Dong Shuangwei, an analyst with Beijing Capital Futures.
Dong said prices at around 30,000 yuan per tonne reflected production costs. "Overall cotton supply is still tight, but today's rise does not reflect fundamentals. It's because of short-term funds." Earlier, China's National Bureau of Statistics confirmed China's cotton output fell 6.3 per cent in 2010 to 5.97 million tonnes. But the decline was largely expected, having been forecast by an industry body and trailed by a previous, albeit smaller, estimate of falling output. Cotton acreage fell to 4.85 million hectares in 2010 from 4.95 million tonnes the previous year, the Bureau said. The Chinese contract's daily limit rise followed a similar jump in the benchmark US contract which rose by its 7 cent daily limit in Asian trading earlier on Monday, after another limit-up in late trading on Friday.
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