Vancouver Sun

Cost of your morning sip to increase

Drought, too much rain, disease affecting coffee, sugar, oranges

- MARVIN G. PEREZ

The buzz of the morning alarm might start to sound even more painful thanks to topsy-turvy weather in Brazil that’s pushing up the cost of commoditie­s that find their way into your breakfast drink.

Across the country’s coffee belt, dry weather is hurting production of arabica and robusta beans. At the same time, too much rain in citrus areas hampered production of orange juice, while frost in sugar-growing regions has cut yields. Brazil is the world’s biggest producer and exporter of all three products, underscori­ng why supply problems have prompted investors to increase bets on price gains; a combined measure for holdings in the three products is at an all-time high.

Sugar and orange-juice futures in New York are already trading at near four-year highs. Arabica coffee, the variety favoured by Starbucks Corp., last week reached the highest price since February 2015. Brazil’s weather problems are coming after El Niño spurred drought across Asia earlier this year, reducing its sugar and coffee supplies. In Florida, the No. 2 orange-juice supplier, a disease-spreading bug has devastated crops.

“This isn’t a short-term phenomenon — you are seeing some real supply-side constraint­s,” said Lara Magnusen, a La Jolla, California­based portfolio manager at Altegris Advisors, which oversees $2.47 billion.

The world market this season is poised for a second straight annual supply shortfall, which will wipe out almost all the stockpiles accumulate­d during the prior four years of surpluses, according to trader Czarnikow Group.

“We are moving back to significan­t tightness,” said Gillian Rutherford, who helps oversee about $12 billion as a commoditie­s port- folio manager at Pacific Investment Management Co. in Newport Beach, California.

For coffee, Brazil’s supply woes are also being compounded by problems in Asia. Drought hurt crops in Vietnam, the largest producer of the robusta variety. Consumers were hopeful that the South American harvest of the beans could help ease supply tightness, but instead dry weather hampered output. As robusta supplies grow scarcer, more roasters are increasing their use of arabica beans and driving up those prices. Arabica futures in New York are heading for a fifth straight monthly increase, which would be the longest streak since 2010. They’re up 19 per cent this year.

While dryness has been hurting many crops, the problem for orange trees has been excessive rain. Too much humidity sparked concerns over crop disease for Brazil’s groves, Cepea, the University of Sao Paulo research arm, said this month.

Meanwhile, a bug known as the Asian citrus psyllid continues to spread a bacterial disease that’s ravaging trees in South America and Florida. Global production of the beverage is already set to slump to the lowest in decades, according to the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e.

Though the weather has been to blame for Brazil’s crop gloom, there’s still time for a turnaround that can help rescue plants, said Ben Ross, portfolio manager and co-head of commoditie­s at New York-based Cohen & Steers Capital Management, which oversees $61 billion in assets. And even if the conditions linger, the higher prices could be their own undoing. U.S. consumptio­n has already slackened for orange juice.

“At some point, the prices are going to hurt demand,” Ross said. “The upside is limited.”

 ?? NELSON ALMEIDA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? A worker dries organic coffee beans produced at the Fortaleza Environmen­tal Farm in Mococa, some 300 kilometres northeast of Sao Paulo, Brazil. Dryness has had an impact on the country’s arabica and robusta beans, which is expected to increase prices.
NELSON ALMEIDA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES A worker dries organic coffee beans produced at the Fortaleza Environmen­tal Farm in Mococa, some 300 kilometres northeast of Sao Paulo, Brazil. Dryness has had an impact on the country’s arabica and robusta beans, which is expected to increase prices.

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