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Global Coffee Supply Dynamics Push Prices Higher Amid Mixed Signals
Weather Woes in Brazil Support Price Rally
Arabica coffee futures for March delivery have gained ground, climbing 0.17% as traders grapple with adverse weather conditions in Brazil, the world’s dominant arabica producer. The price momentum reflects growing concerns over insufficient precipitation in key growing regions. Brazil’s Minas Gerais, home to the bulk of the nation’s arabica output, experienced only 67% of its typical rainfall in early January—a critical shortfall during the growing season. Simultaneously, arabica spot prices have reached their highest level in approximately four weeks, signaling strong market conviction around supply tightness.
Currency movements are amplifying the price support. A stronger Brazilian real hitting one-month peaks against the US dollar is rendering Brazilian coffee exports comparatively less competitive on international markets, paradoxically helping to sustain higher arabica valuations by constraining supply flows.
Robusta Market Shows Resilience Despite Production Surge
March ICE robusta coffee has posted a modest 0.48% advance. However, this measured gain masks deeper market complexities. Vietnam, currently the world’s premier robusta supplier, has ramped up shipments dramatically—the National Statistics Office reported a 17.5% year-over-year surge in coffee exports for 2025, reaching 1.58 million metric tons. Analysis from Barchart robusta tracking indicates this supply expansion is tempering price gains for the lower-grade variant, even as inventory tightness elsewhere lends support.
Warehouse Inventory Fluctuations Underscore Supply Volatility
Declining ICE-warehoused stocks are providing underlying price support across both coffee types. Arabica inventory recently dipped to 398,645 bags on November 20—the lowest in 1.75 years—before partially recovering to 461,829 bags. Robusta stocks similarly bottomed at a one-year low of 4,012 lots in mid-December, then rebounded to 4,278 lots by year-end. These inventory swings reflect both genuine supply tightness and seasonal rebalancing, creating uncertainty about the true extent of market undersupply.
US Import Disruptions Leave Lingering Effects
A prior episode of elevated US import tariffs on Brazilian coffee depressed American purchasing power. During the August-to-October tariff period, US coffee imports from Brazil plummeted 52% year-over-year to 983,970 bags. While tariff levels have since been reduced, US coffee stockpiles remain comparatively lean, limiting buyer flexibility and supporting prices through constrained demand absorption capacity.
Production Forecasts Paint Divergent Picture
Brazil’s Conab agency projects the 2025 harvest at 56.54 million bags, up 2.4% from the prior September estimate. Yet this gains-driven narrative is offset by arabica production declining 4.7% globally to 95.515 million bags, according to December USDA projections. Vietnam’s robusta output, by contrast, is anticipated to climb 6.2% to 30.8 million bags—a four-year high—with forecasts suggesting potential growth of up to 10% if weather remains favorable.
Global Supply-Demand Imbalance Ahead
The International Coffee Organization reported a 0.3% decline in worldwide coffee exports for the current marketing year (October-September cycle), totaling 138.658 million bags. Yet USDA projections for 2025/26 show global production rising 2% to a record 178.848 million bags, while ending stocks are anticipated to compress 5.4% to 20.148 million bags. This combination—rising production coupled with tightening inventories—suggests the market is pricing in uneven geographic distribution of supplies and shifting consumption patterns rather than genuine scarcity. The price resilience of arabica amid robusta gains reflects confidence in the specialty coffee segment’s continued demand strength relative to commodity-grade alternatives.