☕ Coffee at 10-year highs!

2:10 pm 10 February 2022

Strong drop in stockpiles and supply concerns lift coffee prices

Coffee has finally broken to fresh multi-year highs following a 2-month long sideways move. Coffee trades at the highest level in 10 years. What fuels price gains on this market? Has the fundamental situation changed recently? What's next for prices? Find out in our analysis

Significant drop in inventories

Start investing today or test a free demo

Open real account TRY DEMO Download mobile app Download mobile app

Coffee stockpiles on global exchanges have been dropping since late-2018. However, drop accelerated significantly at the beginning of 2020. Inventories dropped to a 10-year low at the beginning of the pandemic. Concerns over coffee shortage waned quickly due to significant drop in demand as a result of Covid-19 restrictions.

Stockpiles began to drop again in 2021. Low temperatures as well as droughts drained coffee stockpiles in Brazil and has significantly limited production potential in this country. Stockpiles started to shrink at an unprecedented rate. Currently inventories sit slightly above 1 million bags, or slightly above 0.5% of global annual demand. Those would last to satisfy just 2 days of consumption.

Coffee stockpiles drop significantly and there no improvement in sight can be spotted (yellow line, inverted axis). Local lows from late-90 correspond to inventory levels of just 20 thousand bags. Source:Bloomberg

Lack of change in fundamentals

In spite of emergence of Omicron, life around the world is getting back to normal. It means that demand for coffee from restaurants as well as offices is recovering. However, raw coffee price increases will not have much of an impact on coffee prices for consumers as other costs make up a bulk of coffee price sold in restaurants or cafes.

Meanwhile, the production outlook is unchanged. It may take years to restore lost saplings and weather conditions are harsh for harvest and plantings this season. Deficit on the coffee market may extend into next year

What's next?

Coffee is trading around 15% higher year-to-date. However, rally may not be over yet as fundamentals and BRL situation support further price gains. The Brazilian real has been appreciating, making Brazilian exports less attractive. This may further depress stockpiles of certified coffee on exchanges and put upward pressure on prices. Arabica prices reached the a major resistance zone in the 250-275 area. Next zone to watch out can be found ranging between 300-330 cents per pound. Record highs were reached back in 1977 near 337.5 cents per pound. The last time coffee traded above 300 cents was in 2011.

Arabica prices broke above the triangle pattern. Textbook range of the breakout from this pattern points to a potential upward move to as high as 277 cents per pound. Stronger BRL is supporting coffee prices. Source: xStation5

Is there a risk?

One cannot rule out that coffee demand will drop in case new restrictions are imposed. However, this is not the base case scenario. Market is unpredictable and coffee is highly overbought - the number of open long positions is very high while the number of short positions is very low. At the same time we can observe a pick-up in the number of positions opened by small speculators (so-called "dumb money), what is sometimes treated as a contrarian signal.

The content of this report has been created by XTB S.A., with its registered office in Warsaw, at Prosta 67, 00-838 Warsaw, Poland, (KRS number 0000217580) and supervised by Polish Supervision Authority ( No. DDM-M-4021-57-1/2005). This material is a marketing communication within the meaning of Art. 24 (3) of Directive 2014/65/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 May 2014 on markets in financial instruments and amending Directive 2002/92/EC and Directive 2011/61/EU (MiFID II). Marketing communication is not an investment recommendation or information recommending or suggesting an investment strategy within the meaning of Regulation (EU) No 596/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 April 2014 on market abuse (market abuse regulation) and repealing Directive 2003/6/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council and Commission Directives 2003/124/EC, 2003/125/EC and 2004/72/EC and Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2016/958 of 9 March 2016 supplementing Regulation (EU) No 596/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council with regard to regulatory technical standards for the technical arrangements for objective presentation of investment recommendations or other information recommending or suggesting an investment strategy and for disclosure of particular interests or indications of conflicts of interest or any other advice, including in the area of investment advisory, within the meaning of the Trading in Financial Instruments Act of 29 July 2005 (i.e. Journal of Laws 2019, item 875, as amended). The marketing communication is prepared with the highest diligence, objectivity, presents the facts known to the author on the date of preparation and is devoid of any evaluation elements. The marketing communication is prepared without considering the client’s needs, his individual financial situation and does not present any investment strategy in any way. The marketing communication does not constitute an offer of sale, offering, subscription, invitation to purchase, advertisement or promotion of any financial instruments. XTB S.A. is not liable for any client’s actions or omissions, in particular for the acquisition or disposal of financial instruments, undertaken on the basis of the information contained in this marketing communication. In the event that the marketing communication contains any information about any results regarding the financial instruments indicated therein, these do not constitute any guarantee or forecast regarding the future results.

Share:
Back
Xtb logo

Join over 1 000 000 XTB Group Clients from around the world.

We use cookies

By clicking “Accept All”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyze site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts.

This group contains cookies that are necessary for our websites to work. They take part in functionalities like language preferences, traffic distribution or keeping user session. They cannot be disabled.

Cookie name
Description
SERVERID
userBranchSymbol cc 2 March 2024
adobe_unique_id cc 1 March 2025
__hssc cc 8 September 2022
SESSID cc 2 March 2024
__cf_bm cc 8 September 2022
intercom-id-iojaybix cc 26 November 2024
intercom-session-iojaybix cc 8 March 2024

We use tools that let us analyze the usage of our page. Such data lets us improve the user experience of our web service.

Cookie name
Description
__hstc cc 7 March 2023
__hssrc

This group of cookies is used to show you ads of topics that you are interested in. It also lets us monitor our marketing activities, it helps to measure the performance of our ads.

Cookie name
Description
hubspotutk cc 7 March 2023

Cookies from this group store your preferences you gave while using the site, so that they will already be here when you visit the page after some time.

Cookie name
Description

This page uses cookies. Cookies are files stored in your browser and are used by most websites to help personalise your web experience. For more information see our Privacy Policy You can manage cookies by clicking "Settings". If you agree to our use of cookies, click "Accept all".

Change region and language
Country of residence
Language