Here’s a joke in three tweets for ya.
The funny part is that I loved the logo until I read that last part…
And now I can’t unsee it.
You too? š³
Stop it.
Sorry mom!
recovering economist
Here’s a joke in three tweets for ya.
The funny part is that I loved the logo until I read that last part…
And now I can’t unsee it.
You too? š³
Stop it.
Sorry mom!
I am often asked what the best cotton marketing strategy is.
So what did I do?
I went and looked at the data – so you don’t have to.
Here’s what I found.
First, I looked at four different options.
After the crop is planted, one-third of the crop is fixed at three different times during the year.
Specifically:
A portion of the crop is fixed each month of the year.
Specifically:
The entire crop is fixed in December, near harvest.
Specifically:
The entire crop is fixed in the first three months of the year.
Specifically:
In doing this, I used the daily nearby prices from the last 20 years (2022 – 2003).
If futures were not trading on these specific days, the price of the next business day was used.
The results?
Times at #1 | Times at #2 | Times at #3 | Times at #4 | Avg 20-yr Price | ||
1/3 Marketing | 2 | 8 | 9 | 1 | 74.28 | |
Monthly Marketing | 0 | 8 | 9 | 3 | 74.21 | |
Sell At Harvest | 10 | 2 | 0 | 8 | 73.66 | |
Early Year Marketing | 8 | 2 | 2 | 8 | 76.41 |
Does this even help us?
Let’s look at it.
Of course, we would like to not bother with any of this, right?
Just give me the highest price of the year! š¤£
But that’s hardly a systematic and repeatable approach, is it?
In the end, I can only give you my best answer: What would I do if it were me?
How do we combine all these methods together in a coherent way?
First, understand that there is no magic bullet.
But hereās what I would do.
You have questions? š³
Let me explain #4.
I truly believe that one of the best things you can do in marketing your cotton is to make cotton a smaller portion of your total revenue.
Talk all you want about market timing, in the end, the optimal cotton marketing program is about lowering a grower’s risk.
Right? Right.
Itās about risk.
And the fundamental axiom of lowering risk is diversification.
I wrote more about the need for revenue diversification in business here.
Possible Options?
I mean, what is the problem and goal we are after? What is it really?
The answer is in turning the question around.
It’s not: When can I sell my cotton for the highest price?
Ask instead: How do I make myself insensitive to low cotton prices?
The former is impossible to do consistently – but the latter is straightforward to work towards.
Do you see it?
Not the advice you thought you were going to get here, is it?
It’s not what I originally began writing either…
But I think this is what so many cotton growers need – it’s what we all need – actually.
Less Cotton Price Risk = More Diversification
You got this.
=================================
While none of these programs specifically address options, it may be worth your time to read this post: Option Hedging: The Virtue Of Second Best
The idea of the Early Year Cotton Marketing option comes from the study I pointed to here.