December arabica coffee (KCZ22) on Friday closed -3.70 (-1.59%), and Nov ICE Robusta coffee (RMX22) closed down -5 (-0.22%).
Coffee prices fell on Friday after the Costa Rican Coffee Institute reported that Costa Rica Aug coffee exports rose +5.3% y/y to 103,367 bags.
Coffee prices surged last week to 6-1/4 month highs on concern that excessive dryness in Brazil will reduce coffee yields and curb global coffee supplies. Â Somar Meteorologia reported that Minas Gerais received no rain in the past week or 0% of the historical average. Â Minas Gerais accounts for about 30% of Brazil's arabica crop. Â
Maxar Technologies said last Monday that La Nina weather conditions are likely to last through the end of the year, which suggests below-normal rain for Brazil through year-end. Â That would exacerbate drought conditions and further stress Brazil's coffee crops.
Brazil's 2022-23 coffee harvest was 98% done as of August 30, according to a report by Safras on Sep 1, which was in line with the 5-year average and the year-ago level. Â The robusta harvest has been completed while the arabica harvest is 95% complete.
ICE-monitored arabica coffee inventories are tight and bullish for prices. Â ICE inventories on Aug 15 fell to a 23-year low of 571,580 bags, although inventories have since recovered moderately to a 4-week high of 672,585 bags Wednesday. Â
Robusta coffee has support from smaller global supplies. Â Vietnam's General Department of Customs reported Monday that Vietnam's coffee exports in Aug fell -12% m/m and -6.2% y/y to 110,000 tons. Â In the bigger picture, however, Vietnam's exports in the eight months through Aug rose +14.7% y/y to 1.242 million metric tons. Â Vietnam is the world's biggest producer of robusta coffee beans. Â The USDA June 7 revised its 2021-22 coffee production estimate for Vietnam upward to 31.58 million bags from 31.1 million bags but said 2022/23 production would fall by -2.2% y/y to 30.9 million bags. Â
Smaller coffee production from Colombia is supportive of arabica prices. Â The National Federation of Coffee Growers reported Aug 3 that Colombia's July coffee production fell -22% y/y to 944,000 bags. Â Colombia is the world's second-largest producer of arabica beans.
Smaller global coffee exports are supportive of coffee prices. Â The International Coffee Organization (ICO) Wednesday reported that global coffee exports in July fell -6.6% y/y to 10.12 mln bags, and total exports from Oct-July were down -0.3% y/y to 108.8 mln bags. Â Also, Cecafe reported Aug 10 that Brazil's July coffee exports fell -16% y/y to 2.17 million bags on logistics and harvest delays at the beginning of the harvest season. Â In addition, Honduras, the world's fourth largest producer of arabica beans, reported on Aug 1 that July coffee exports fell -by 38% y/y to 409,668 bags due to a poor crop.
In a bearish factor, the USDA, in its bi-annual report released on June 23, projected that 2022/23 global coffee production would climb +4.7% y/y to 174.95 mln bags, primarily due to Brazil's arabica crop entering the on-year of the biennial production cycle. Â The USDA projects that 2022/23 global coffee ending stocks will climb +6.3% y/y to 34.704 mln bags.
Â
More Coffee News from Barchart