Cotton Monthly Price - Singapore Dollar per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Mar 2026: -0.537 (-19.80%)
Chart

Description: Cotton (Cotton Outlook "CotlookA index"), middling 1-3/32 inch, traded in Far East, C/F beginning 2006; previously Northern Europe, c.i.f.

Unit: Singapore Dollar per Kilogram



Source: Cotton Outlook; International Cotton Advisory Committee; Liverpool Cotton Services Ltd.; World Bank.

See also: Cotton production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Cotton is a natural textile fiber harvested from the seed hairs of the cotton plant and traded in commodity markets as a soft agricultural raw material. The standard reference for international pricing is the Cotlook A Index, which reflects Middling 1-3/32 inch staple cotton delivered on a CIF Liverpool basis. Market quotations are commonly expressed in US dollars per kilogram or in cents per pound, depending on the exchange or reporting convention. Cotton is spun into yarn and woven or knitted into fabrics used in apparel, home textiles, and industrial products. It is also processed into cottonseed oil, animal feed, and other by-products, making the crop important beyond fiber alone. Because cotton is a globally traded, storable agricultural commodity, its price reflects both crop conditions and the balance between textile mill demand and exportable supply.

Supply Drivers

Cotton supply is shaped by climate, water availability, soil conditions, and the length of the growing season. Major producing regions include the United States, India, China, Pakistan, Brazil, and parts of West and Central Asia, where warm temperatures and long frost-free periods support fiber development. The crop is sensitive to rainfall timing, heat stress, and excessive moisture during flowering and boll formation, so weather variability can alter both yield and fiber quality. Irrigated production depends on water access and energy costs, while rain-fed production is exposed to monsoon or seasonal rainfall patterns. Pest pressure, especially from bollworms, aphids, and other insects, can raise input costs and reduce lint output. Because cotton is an annual crop, acreage decisions are made before planting and cannot respond quickly to price changes. Ginning, transport, and port logistics also matter because lint must be separated, compressed, and moved efficiently to export channels. Fiber length, strength, and cleanliness influence grade and therefore realized prices.

Demand Drivers

Cotton demand is driven primarily by textile manufacturing, especially yarn spinning for apparel, household fabrics, and blended textiles. Consumption is linked to population growth, urbanization, and income growth because clothing and home textile use rises with household purchasing power. Demand is also affected by competition from synthetic fibers such as polyester, which can substitute for cotton in many applications when relative prices or performance characteristics favor synthetics. Cotton retains advantages in breathability, comfort, and absorbency, so it remains important in premium apparel and certain household uses. Seasonal buying patterns in textile supply chains can influence short-term demand as mills build inventories ahead of production cycles. Demand also depends on the structure of global garment manufacturing, with spinning and weaving concentrated in countries that combine labor availability, industrial capacity, and access to imported fiber. Cottonseed by-products add value to the crop, but lint demand remains the main price driver. Changes in fabric technology, blending ratios, and consumer preferences for natural fibers also shape long-run consumption.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Cotton prices are influenced by the US dollar because the fiber is internationally traded and priced in dollars, so currency movements affect purchasing power for importers and export competitiveness for producers. Interest rates matter through inventory financing and working-capital costs for merchants, mills, and traders that hold physical stocks between harvest and consumption. Storage and transport costs can create contango or backwardation in related futures markets, depending on the balance between nearby supply and later availability. Cotton also responds to broader industrial and consumer cycles because textile demand is tied to discretionary spending and manufacturing activity. As an agricultural commodity, it can show some inflation sensitivity, but the effect is mediated by crop-specific supply conditions and substitution with synthetic fibers.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 20212.71-
Apr 20212.67-1.60%
May 20212.66-0.21%
Jun 20212.774.14%
Jul 20212.915.06%
Aug 20213.023.73%
Sep 20213.092.19%
Oct 20213.5013.30%
Nov 20213.788.14%
Dec 20213.62-4.33%
Jan 20223.938.59%
Feb 20224.114.48%
Mar 20224.232.94%
Apr 20224.6710.48%
May 20224.996.84%
Jun 20224.70-5.72%
Jul 20224.03-14.34%
Aug 20223.79-5.87%
Sep 20223.66-3.44%
Oct 20223.13-14.42%
Nov 20223.10-1.18%
Dec 20223.00-3.02%
Jan 20232.93-2.42%
Feb 20232.91-0.58%
Mar 20232.82-3.33%
Apr 20232.80-0.71%
May 20232.77-0.93%
Jun 20232.75-0.87%
Jul 20232.73-0.53%
Aug 20232.854.28%
Sep 20232.953.42%
Oct 20232.89-1.97%
Nov 20232.69-7.03%
Dec 20232.67-0.55%
Jan 20242.711.52%
Feb 20242.969.09%
Mar 20242.95-0.33%
Apr 20242.70-8.41%
May 20242.58-4.42%
Jun 20242.47-4.16%
Jul 20242.41-2.57%
Aug 20242.32-3.91%
Sep 20242.361.91%
Oct 20242.412.06%
Nov 20242.41-0.11%
Dec 20242.37-1.42%
Jan 20252.34-1.22%
Feb 20252.32-1.09%
Mar 20252.28-1.40%
Apr 20252.290.29%
May 20252.23-2.84%
Jun 20252.22-0.22%
Jul 20252.230.34%
Aug 20252.22-0.23%
Sep 20252.21-0.64%
Oct 20252.18-1.56%
Nov 20252.16-0.50%
Dec 20252.11-2.73%
Jan 20262.110.12%
Feb 20262.07-1.98%
Mar 20262.175.27%

Top Companies

Plains Cotton Cooperative Association
Website: http://www.pcca.com/
Location: Lubbock, Texas, India
Estimated Production: 8 million yards per year

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