RFD NEWS Special Report: Why Cotton Wholesalers Matter More When Markets Turn Volatile

Often overlooked, cotton wholesalers act as stabilizers during market stress, translating fragmented retail demand into workable production programs for mills and manufacturers.

cotton bud with the sunset_Photo by Kelli via AdobeStock_386673555.jpg

A cotton bud framed by a sunset.

This week, we take a closer look at an often-overlooked segment of the cotton supply chain — wholesalers — and the role they play in stabilizing demand and managing risk in volatile markets. We examine how wholesalers operate among growers, mills, and retailers, and why their role becomes more visible during periods of stress.

The series draws on insights from longtime textile executive Bob Antoshak, who argues that cotton and apparel markets do not operate as simple producer-to-consumer systems. Instead, wholesalers consolidate fragmented retail demand, finance inventory, and translate uneven buying patterns into workable production programs for mills and manufacturers.

We’ll explore why efforts to bypass wholesalers can increase volatility rather than reduce costs, shifting risk onto retailers, factories, and ultimately producers. Additional coverage will focus on how wholesalers support diverse retail channels — including independents, regional chains, and workwear programs — that collectively sustain a significant share of cotton demand.

The series concludes with a look back at 2025, a year marked by tariffs, freight disruptions, and inflation, and how wholesale decision-making helped convert uncertainty into executable supply-chain plans.

Farm-Level Takeaway: Understanding how wholesalers function helps explain why cotton demand can remain resilient even during turbulent market conditions.
Tony St. James, RFD NEWS Markets Specialist

Wholesalers Stabilize Cotton Supply Chains During Volatile Markets

Cotton wholesalers play a critical but often overlooked role in keeping supply chains functioning when markets turn volatile, according to textile executive Bob Antoshak. As pricing swings, logistics disruptions, and demand uncertainty intensify, wholesalers help absorb risk that would otherwise fall directly on producers, mills, and retailers.

Antoshak explains that the cotton and apparel markets are not linear systems that move cleanly from producer to end user. Instead, they rely on wholesalers to consolidate fragmented demand, finance inventory, and translate uneven retail needs into workable production programs. Without that stabilizing layer, volatility increases rather than efficiency.

Wholesalers also provide working capital by carrying inventory and committing to volumes ahead of confirmed demand. That function allows factories to maintain steady production schedules while giving retailers flexibility to replenish product as conditions change.

In uncertain years, wholesalers are often the first to adjust programs, pricing, and logistics to keep product flowing. Antoshak argues that this ability to respond quickly helps prevent supply disruptions that ultimately ripple back to growers through weaker demand and pricing instability.

Farm-Level Takeaway: A stable wholesale layer helps protect cotton demand during market stress.
Tony St. James, RFD NEWS Markets Specialist

Cutting Out Wholesalers Weakens Cotton Market Stability

Efforts to “cut out the middleman” in cotton and apparel supply chains often increase risk rather than reduce costs, according to industry veteran Bob Antoshak. Removing wholesalers shifts inventory, financing, and execution burdens onto participants least equipped to absorb them.

Antoshak notes that wholesalers standardize thousands of smaller retail transactions, compliance requirements, and delivery schedules into manageable programs for mills and manufacturers. Without that function, brands face higher administrative costs or abandon smaller accounts altogether, narrowing market access.

For retailers, especially independents and regional chains, buying directly from factories often means longer lead times, larger minimum orders, and tighter payment terms. Those constraints reduce assortment flexibility and discourage replenishment, weakening overall cotton demand.

Factories face increased volatility when wholesalers disappear. Wholesalers smooth production cycles by aggregating demand across many buyers, helping keep lines running even when individual accounts pull back. Without that buffer, factories become more dependent on a handful of large customers, increasing downside risk across the supply chain.

Farm-Level Takeaway: Removing wholesalers often reduces cotton demand stability, not costs.
Tony St. James, RFD NEWS Markets Specialist

2025 Proved Cotton Wholesalers Matter In Stressful Markets

Market conditions in 2025 provided a clear test of the wholesale model, according to Bob Antoshak, as cotton and apparel supply chains navigated tariffs, freight volatility, inflation, and shifting demand signals. The year highlighted how wholesalers convert uncertainty into executable plans.

Antoshak describes wholesalers as decision-makers rather than pass-through entities. During 2025, wholesalers adjusted assortments, pricing structures, and logistics strategies to keep programs viable as costs and demand changed. That responsiveness helped preserve order flow for suppliers and continuity for customers.

On the supply side, wholesalers provided factories with clearer volume commitments and timing, allowing production schedules to remain intact despite broader market instability. On the demand side, wholesalers helped retailers maintain product availability without overextending inventory.

Rather than amplifying volatility, wholesalers reduced friction by making rapid commercial decisions based on real-time sell-through data. Antoshak argues that this role becomes most visible in difficult years, when execution matters more than theory.

Farm-Level Takeaway: Stress years reveal the wholesale channel’s stabilizing value.
Tony St. James, RFD NEWS Markets Specialist

Cotton Wholesalers Protect Demand Across Diverse Retail Channels

Cotton wholesalers help preserve broad-based demand by serving retail channels that would otherwise struggle to source product efficiently, according to Bob Antoshak. This “long tail” of retail plays a meaningful role in sustaining cotton consumption.

Independent stores, regional chains, uniform programs, and workwear accounts often lack the scale or capital to buy directly from factories. Wholesalers break large production runs into manageable assortments, smaller lots, and replenishment programs that keep these outlets viable.

Antoshak notes that wholesalers also democratize access to compliance, traceability, and quality standards. By spreading those systems across hundreds of accounts, wholesalers raise overall market discipline while reducing the burden on individual retailers.

Without wholesalers, assortments narrow, buying becomes more conservative, and out-of-stocks increase. Over time, that contraction reduces cotton’s retail footprint and concentrates demand among fewer players, increasing vulnerability across the supply chain.

Farm-Level Takeaway: Wholesale distribution helps sustain the diversity of cotton demand.
Tony St. James, RFD NEWS Markets Specialist
Related Stories
Brooks York with Agrisompo joined us on Monday’s Market Day Report with some guidance on how producers can navigate their crop insurance claims for unsold grain crops.
For many farm businesses, property taxes on business assets have become a significant and highly visible expense, threatening liquidity, discouraging investment, and creating a disproportionate burden when compared to other industries.
Ethanol markets remain mixed — weaker production and blend rates are being partially balanced by stronger exports as winter demand patterns take shape.
Strong U.S. yields and steady demand leave most major crops well supplied, keeping price pressure in place unless usage strengthens or weather shifts outlooks.
While agriculture doesn’t predict every recession, the sector’s long history of turning down before the broader economy
The ACRE Act modestly reduces farmland borrowing costs now, with more savings possible once federal guidance clarifies which loans qualify.
ARC-CO delivers the bulk of 2024 support, offering key margin relief as producers manage tight operating conditions.
USDA’s steady yields and heavy global stocks keep grains range-bound unless demand firms or South American weather becomes a real threat.

Tony St. James joined the RFD-TV talent team in August 2024, bringing a wealth of experience and a fresh perspective to RFD-TV and Rural Radio Channel 147 Sirius XM. In addition to his role as Market Specialist (collaborating with Scott “The Cow Guy” Shellady to provide radio and TV audiences with the latest updates on ag commodity markets), he hosts “Rural America Live” and serves as talent for trade shows.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Grain farms still have strong balance sheets, but another stretch of low profits will force hard cost cuts, especially on high-rent, highly leveraged operations.
Mold damage is tightening China’s corn supplies, supporting higher prices and creating potential demand for alternative feed grains in early 2026.
The new rule removes prevented-plant buy-up coverage, prompting strong objections from farm groups concerned about added risk exposure.
Tight Credit, Strong Yields Define Early December Agriculture
Lawmakers and experts react to the Administration’s long-awaited announcement of “bridge” aid to stabilize farms and offset 2025 losses until expanded safety-net programs begin in 2026.
Southern producers head into 2026 with thin margins, tighter credit, and rising agronomic risks despite scattered yield improvements.