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Executive Cotton Update: March 2020

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U.S. Macroeconomic Indicators & the Cotton Supply Chain

Macroeconomic Overview

Spread of the coronavirus has dominated headlines and mindsets of financial traders. Fear of outbreaks outside China pulled U.S. stock indexes off record levels with the steepest declines since the financial crisis. Recent volatility was sufficient to cause trading on the NY Stock Exchange to be temporarily suspended. Virtually all markets have been affected, including cotton, which has fallen from levels near 70 cents/lb to those approaching 60 cents/lb.

Measures of factory activity signaled a record contraction in Chinese manufacturing in February. Progress towards a return to normal has been reported from China, but the shutdown that occurred in recent weeks is still being digested by supply chains. Even if garments are assembled outside of China, many other major apparel exporting nations, notably those in Southeast Asia, are dependent on Chinese manufacturing for inputs. For example, a significant proportion of Vietnamese cut and sew operations rely on Chinese fabric. This means that retailers and brands that have shifted clothing imports away from China can still face delays and cost increases stemming from the effects of the virus within China.

On top of these supply chain specific issues, there are macroeconomic consequences. China represents about one-third of global economic growth, and Chinese economic growth has become increasingly dependent on domestic consumer demand. With many Chinese people forced to stay home over the past month, they were not earning or spending as they would have otherwise. Some spending may be recovered as conditions return to normal, but some purchases can also be expected to have been lost. The same set of consequences can be expected outside of China as the virus spreads. Many flights and meetings have already been canceled, meaning lost revenue lost by airlines, hotels, and restaurants. If other countries move towards a more general shutdown, as in China, impacts will compound.

In early March, the Organization for Economic Development and Cooperation (OECD) ventured an estimate for global GDP growth in 2020 of 2.4%. This figure was based on the assumption that the epidemic will have peaked in China in the first quarter and that the virus will be mostly contained in other countries. In 2019, global growth was a sluggish 2.9%, and central banks around the world were active in lowering rates last year to stimulate growth. This included three quarter-point rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. Due to concerns about the coronavirus, the Fed cut the rate by half a percentage point at their meeting in early March. Rates on longer-term U.S. Treasuries dropped to record lows ahead of the announcement and have continued to slide since then.

The virus is just one of many sources of uncertainty that markets are contending with. Another is the series of U.S. elections this year, with primaries on-going and the general election this fall. Yet another is the trade dispute. On February 14th, the U.S. lowered the tariff increases applied to List 4a (covers apparel products where Chinese share is less than 75%) that went into effect in September from 15 to 7.5 percentage points. The reduction in duties will ease some cost pressure, but there is already evidence of significant damage to apparel import demand.

In the five months of available data since tariffs on Chinese-made apparel were raised (September-January), imports of clothing from China were down 29% for cotton-dominant items and down 22% for garments of all-fiber content. While there has been some growth in imports from other countries, it has not been sufficient to make up for the losses suffered from China. Cotton-dominant apparel imports from all sources were down 9% over the past five months. Apparel imports of all-fiber contents from all sources were down 10%. The effects have been even more significant for certain products. For example, imports of Chinese jeans are down more than 40% for both men’s and women’s categories since September (jeans imports from all sources were down 13%).

Employment

The U.S. economy is estimated to have added 273,000 jobs in February. Revisions to both December (from +147,000 to +184,000) and January (from +225,000 to +273,000) were positive. Following this month’s revisions, job growth over the past twelve months is 201,000. During the same period one year ago, job growth was 171,000. The unemployment rate dropped to 3.5%. Over the past six months, the unemployment rate has been either 3.5% or 3.6%, holding to the lowest levels since the late 1960s. Wages increased 3.1%, which is near the low end of the range of 3.0% to 3.5% that has held between August 2018 and the present.

Consumer Confidence & Spending

The Conference Board’s Index of Consumer Confidence was nearly unchanged in February, increasing 0.3 points to 130.7. It remains high by historical standards. Overall consumer spending rose 0.1% month-over-month in January and was 2.8% higher year-over-year. Consumer spending on apparel decreased 2.3% month-over-month but was up 2.4% year-over-year.

Consumer Prices & Import Data

The CPI for garments increased 0.5% month-over-month in January but was 1.9% lower year-over-year. The average import price for cotton-dominant apparel (USD per square-meter equivalent or SME) was slightly lower month-over-month in January (from $3.43 to $3.41/SME). Year-over-year, the average was 0.6% higher.

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