MUMBAI, Dec 10 (Reuters) - India's cottonseed oilcake, or kapaskhali, futures ended little changed on Thursday as soaring cotton exports supported prices, but profit-taking weighed on sentiment, analysts said. Kapaskhali, a by-product of cottonseed, is used as cattlefeed and is largely consumed in the north-western states of India.
Indian traders have exported 428,076 bales of raw cotton (of 170 kg each) in the first two months of the 2009/10 marketing year, up 19 percent from a year ago.
India's cotton exports in 2009/10 are expected to increase 57 percent to 5.5 million bales, A.B. Joshi, textile commissioner and chairman of Cotton Advisory Board (CAB), had told Reuters earlier this month.
India is likely to harvest 29.5 million bales of cotton in 2009/10, down from 30.5 million bales estimated earlier, as floods and cyclone damaged the crop in southern and western part of the country.
The January contract NCDF0 ended up 0.12 percent at 1,225 from its previous close of 1,223.5 rupees per 100 kg.
Spot kapaskhali in the Akola market rose by 2 rupees to 583.65 rupees per 50 kg.
Source : REUTERS