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May 2nd, 2013
Coffee futures robusta rebounded in London on speculation exchange data due later today will show stockpiles declined as beans from producing countries are trading at a premium. Sugar fell and cocoa swung between gains and losses.
Robusta inventories with a valid grading certificate in warehouses monitored by NYSE Liffe were 126,250 metric tons on April 15. The exchange data is due today and may show that inventories dropped in the two weeks to April 29. Coffee from Vietnam, the world’s top producer of the robusta variety, and third-ranking Indonesia was trading at a premium of $90 a ton to NYSE Liffe last week, according to Volcafe, the Winterthur, Switzerland-based unit of ED&F Man Holdings Ltd.
“There’s speculation that certified stocks have been sold to the industry,” Jerome Jourquin, head of agricultural commodity derivatives at Aurel BGC in Paris, said by e-mail today, referring to coffee roasters.
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March 20th, 2013
Coffee Futures – Arabica coffee climbed for the first time in eight days in New York on speculation roasters may add more of the beans favored by Starbucks Corp. (SBUX) to blends. Sugar and cocoa also rose.
Arabica futures touched $1.3255 a pound yesterday, the lowest since June 2010. The commodity lost 37 percent last year, making it the worst performer in the Standard & Poor’s GSCI gauge of 24 raw materials. Robusta beans, used in instant coffee, climbed 12 percent this year after advancing 6.3 percent in 2012. The premium arabica commands over robusta slid to 35.4 cents a pound yesterday, the lowest since December 2008. That may attract roasters to arabica beans.
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January 25th, 2013
Coffee Futures – Coffee output in Central America and Mexico may tumble as a disease affecting foliage spreads, prompting governments to take emergency measures to protect farms responsible for 14 percent of global production.
Guatemala, Central America’s second-biggest coffee grower, may lose a third of its crop because of leaf rust, President Otto Perez Molina said yesterday in Davos, Switzerland. The crop in Costa Rica may be 30 percent to 40 percent smaller because of the fungus, President Laura Chinchilla said in a separate interview in Davos. Coffee exports from Honduras, the region’s biggest grower, will be down 767,000 bags due to leaf rust, also called roya, the Honduras Coffee Institute said.
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December 28th, 2012
Coffee Futures – Robusta coffee fell for the first time in seven sessions in London as exchange-monitored stockpiles advanced and exports from top grower Vietnam are set to jump this year. Cocoa advanced.
Robusta coffee stockpiles with a valid grading certificate in warehouses monitored by NYSE Liffe were 106,540 metric tons on Dec. 24, up 1.3 percent from two weeks earlier, according to data on the exchange’s website today. Vietnamese coffee exports will be 201,000 tons this month, the country’s Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development estimates. Shipments for the year will total 1.76 million tons, an increase of 40 percent from a year earlier, it forecasts.
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Coffee Futures – Robusta coffee gained for a second day in London, before the expiry of the January options contract later today, as demand continues to be strong and stockpiles are set to keep on falling. Sugar retreated.
Robusta coffee inventories with a valid grading certificate in warehouses monitored by NYSE Liffe were 105,140 metric tons on Dec. 10, down 3.1 percent from two weeks earlier, according to data on the exchange’s website. Stockpiles have fallen 75 percent since reaching an all-time high of 417,420 tons in July 2011. The January robusta options contract expires today, with investors holding 4,932 contracts giving them the right to sell the futures at $1,900 a ton, the most active January put-option, and 1,914 contracts giving them the right to buy at this level.
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Coffee Futures – Coffee farmers in Vietnam, the world’s biggest grower of the robusta variety used by Nestle SA (NESN) in instant drinks, have harvested more beans than last year because of an early start and favorable weather.
Growers reaped about 19 percent of the crop, or 280,000 metric tons, the median of eight trader and shipper estimates compiled by Bloomberg shows. The harvest is set to drop 12 percent to 1.45 million tons from 1.64 million tons last season, while 175,000 tons have been sold, the survey shows.
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Arabica coffee futures on Intercontinental Exchange climbed more than 1 percent on Monday, with the market extending its rebound from last week’s six-week low on short-covering although the upside appeared to be capped by bearish fundamentals.
Cocoa futures on ICE also rose, touching a three-week high with dealers concerned about increasing violence and heavy rains in top grower Ivory Coast, while raw sugar fell, giving back the previous day’s gains in thin volume. December arabica futures on ICE settled up 2.85 cents, or 1.8 percent, at $1.6450 per lb. The contract hit $1.5715 on Thursday, the lowest level for the front month since September 6.
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Coffee Futures – Coffee production in Vietnam, the world’s biggest grower of the robusta variety used by Nestle SA (NESN) in instant drinks, is poised to decline from a record as dry weather cuts yields, bolstering prices.
The harvest may drop 9.4 percent to 1.45 million metric tons in the season that started Oct. 1 from an all-time high of 1.6 million tons in 2011-2012, according to the median of eight trader and shipper estimates compiled by Bloomberg. That’s less than the 26 million bags (1.56 million tons) estimated by Volcafe Ltd. A bag weighs 132 pounds.
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Coffee Futures – U.S. soft futures were mostly higher during U.S. morning trade on Wednesday, with coffee prices rallying to the highest level since July amid growing speculation rain would return to key growing regions in Brazil and disrupt harvesting.
On the ICE Futures U.S. Exchange, Arabica coffee for December delivery traded at USD1.8478 a pound, jumping 1.35%. It earlier rose by as much as 1.65% to hit a session high of USD1.8538 a pound, the strongest level since July 23.
Coffee futures have gained sharply in recent weeks, boosted by speculation adverse weather conditions will return to key coffee-growing regions in Brazil and disrupt the pace of harvest.
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Coffee Futures – Buyers of coffee from Brazil, the world’s largest producer, were getting a bigger discount for arabica beans this week, with futures in New York rallying, according to Flavour Coffee and Cazarini Trading Co.
Fine-cup beans were trading at a discount of 10 cents a pound to the price of the December contract on ICE Futures U.S. in New York, compared with 6 cents a pound last week, data from Rio de Janeiro-based broker Flavour Coffee showed. Good-cup quality beans were at a discount of 20 cents a pound up from 16 cents a pound last week, it said in a report e-mailed yesterday.
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