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Barchart
Rich Asplund

Coffee Prices Consolidate Recent Sharp Gains

May arabica coffee (KCK23) this morning is down -1.20 (-0.63%).  May ICE robusta coffee (RMK23) is down -8 (-0.33%).

Coffee prices Wednesday fell back from early gains and turned lower as fund profit-taking emerged after the sharp rally over the past 1-1/2 weeks.  The outlook for tighter global coffee supplies has sparked fund buying of coffee futures and pushed prices higher, with arabica today posting a 6-week high and robusta posting a 3-month high.  

Strength in the Brazilian real (^USDBRL) is also supportive for arabica coffee as the real today rallied to a 10-month high against the dollar.  A stronger real discourages export selling from Brazil's coffee producers.

Tighter ICE arabica stockpiles are supportive of coffee prices after ICE monitored arabica coffee inventories Tuesday fell to a 4-month low of 729,504 bags.

Last Wednesday, the International Coffee Organization (ICO) reported global coffee exports during Oct-Feb fell -8.7% y/y to 48.66 mln bags.  Separately, Guatemala, the second-largest coffee producer in Central America, reported its coffee exports fell -8% y/y in January to 172,439 bags.  On March 13, the Colombia Coffee Growers Federation reported Colombia Feb coffee exports fell -6% y/y to 928,000 bags.  Brazil's Feb green coffee exports dropped -35.8% y/y to 2.11 mln bags.  By contrast, Honduran Mar coffee exports rose +14% y/y to 1.097 million bags.  Honduras is Central America's biggest exporter of arabica beans.

Ample rainfall in Brazil should boost coffee yields and is negative for coffee prices.   Somar Meteorologia reported Monday that Brazil's Minas Gerais region received 29.8 mm of rain in the week ended April 9, or 148% of the historical average.  Minas Gerais accounts for about 30% of Brazil's arabica crop.

Robusta has support on global supply concerns after coffee trader Volcafe forecasted the global 2023/24 robusta coffee market would see a record deficit of 5.6 mln bags.  In addition, the Association of Indonesian Coffee Exporters and Industries said that Indonesia, the world's third-largest robusta producer, will see its 2023 coffee production fall -20% y/y to 9.6 mln bags due to damage from excessive rainfall across its growing regions.

A bullish factor for arabica prices was the projection from the National Federation of Coffee Growers on March 3 that coffee output in Colombia, the world's second-largest producer of arabica coffee, will drop -4.8% y/y to 5 mln bags in the first half of 2023 as excessive rain and cloudy days hurt yields.

On the bearish side, Safras on Monday projected Brazil's coffee crop this year will increase +13% y/y to 66.65 mln bags and that Brazil's 2023/24 coffee exports will climb by +21% y/y, given a projected surplus of 45 mln bags.

A bearish factor for robusta coffee was Monday's report from Vietnam's General Department of Customs Statistics Office that showed Vietnam's Mar coffee exports rose +5.2% m/m to 210,372 MT.  However, total Q1 coffee exports are down -5% y/y at 552,613 MT.  Vietnam is the world's largest producer of robusta beans.

The International Coffee Organization (ICO) projects the global 2022/23 coffee market deficit will widen to -7.3 mln bags from a -7.1 mln bag deficit in 2021/22.  ICO projects that 2022/23 global coffee production will increase +1.7% y/y to 171.27 mln bags, and 2022/23 global coffee consumption will increase +1.7% y/y to 178.53 mln bags.

The USDA, in its bi-annual report released on December 23, cut its global 2022/23 coffee production estimate by -1.3% to 172.8 mln bags from a June estimate of 175.0 mln bags.  In addition, the USDA cut its 2022/23 global coffee ending stocks estimate by -1.7% to 34.1 mln bags from a June estimate of 34.7 mln bags.  Meanwhile, the USDA's Foreign Agriculture Service (FAS) on November 22 cut its Brazil 2022/23 coffee production forecast by -2.6% to 62.6 mln bags from a prior estimate of 64.3 mln bags.  This year was supposed to be the higher-yielding year of Brazil's biennial coffee crop, but coffee output this year was slashed by drought. 

On the date of publication, Rich Asplund did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here.
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