Is Coffee Getting Hot Enough To Bet On Again?

 | Jun 01, 2022 04:53AM ET

Arabica coffee futures finished higher in May, for the first time in four months. But is the sell-off that began at the end of January over?

The commodity’s charts suggest so, although questions remain about European demand amid the festering war in Ukraine and of buying support from China in the near term as the giant importer of all raw materials struggles to close its recent episodes with COVID.

Consumed by more than two-thirds of the coffee-drinking world, arabica, which is largely grown in Brazil, ranks as the bean of choice for renowned coffee chains from Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) to Restaurant Brands' (NYSE:QSR) owned, Tim Hortons and Dunkin' Donuts. The other coffee variant, robusta, is largely grown in Vietnam and is the premier choice of instant-coffee makers.

Arabica’s front-month coffee contract on ICE Futures US settled May trading at $2.3185 per lb, up 4.4% for the month. In three prior months, it had lost a cumulative 5.5% from January’s settlement of $2.3510.