Diverging Trends For Coffee And Cocoa

 | Nov 15, 2021 12:55AM ET

Coffee prices have traded to the highest levels since 2014 as worries grow over the forthcoming Brazilian crop following drought and frost. A tight coffee market should continue to support prices. Meanwhile, large cocoa stocks suggest upside for cocoa prices is limited despite a deficit in 2021/22h2 Brazil’s coffee supply woes/h2

It has been an extremely volatile year for the coffee market. A large part of this volatility has been due to weather developments in Brazil. Adverse weather in the region has had an impact on several other crops including corn and sugar. However, the impact on Arabica coffee has been significant, which has pushed prices above US$2/lb and to the highest levels since 2014.

Brazil has battled not only with frost this year, but also drought conditions. There are concerns that large areas of coffee trees were damaged, which will have an impact on production next season. Similarly, drought is also expected to weigh on the forthcoming harvest, although how much will depend on precipitation levels over the rainy season.

The Brazilian 2021/22 coffee crop is complete and the latest estimate from Conab is that production over the season totaled 46.88m bags (60kg bags), which is down 25.7% year-on-year. Dry weather weighed on the crop, while it was also the lower yielding year of the biennial cycle.

For the 2022/23 season, while it will be a higher yielding season, there is plenty of uncertainty over the impact of both drought and frost. There are estimates suggesting that as much as 12m bags of coffee could be lost in Brazil next season due to a combination of frost and drought. However more recently, growing regions have seen above average rainfall. If this trend continues over the rainy season, it could help reduce some of the expected losses due to earlier drought conditions.

h2 Brazilian coffee output (m bags)/h2