The Borneo Post

Global coffee glut depends on whether growers defer sales

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HOANG Thi Thom, a coffee grower in No. 2 producer Vietnam, isn’t keen to sell this year’s harvest.

With prices for the robusta coffee she grows down 18 per cent in 2017, Thom has sold just a tiny fraction of the six to seven metric tons she expects to gather this season. The rest she plans to hold back until after the Tet holidays that celebrate the Lunar New Year in mid-February.

“We would suffer a big loss if we sold coffee beans at this dirtcheap price,” said Thom, who farms in Dak Lak, Vietnam’s top growing province. “The remainder of my harvest I think I would sell in February, after Tet.”

And Thom is not alone. Eleven thousand miles away in top producer Brazil, grower Joao Luis Carneiro Vianna is holding back half of this year’s harvest, more than the usual 30 per cent. The price of the milder-tasting, more- expensive arabica beans he produces is down eight per cent this year.

Such reluctance to sell too cheaply by well- capitalise­d farmers in Brazil and Vietnam could upset speculator­s’ bets that a glut will weaken the market further. Prospects of a bigger Vietnamese crop this year, a bumper Brazilian harvest in 2018 and a resulting surplus have helped drive down prices.

Export Trading Group sees a surplus of 5.5 million bags in 2018 to 2019, said Eric Llull, a coffee research manager at the company in Switzerlan­d.

“These are two of the countries where farmers are more sophistica­ted,” Jose Sette, executive director at the Internatio­nal Coffee Organisati­on, said in an interview in Ho Chi Minh City. “At current prices levels, it’s not so attractive to farmers. There’s no enthusiasm for selling quickly.”

Vietnamese production is expected to rise five per cent to 10 per cent, rebounding from last year’s rain-hit harvest, according to Intimex Group, the nation’s largest exporter. In Brazil, traders expect production

We would suffer a big loss if we sold coffee beans at this dirt-cheap price. The remainder of my harvest I think I would sell in February, after Tet. Thom, who farms in Dak Lak, Vietnam’s top growing province

to expand as arabica trees enter the higher-yielding half of a twoyear cycle. Some are even betting on a monster crop, with output at a record.

While increases in both countries could reverse a shortage ETG estimates at 3.1 million bags in the season that started in most countries on Oct 1, hoarding may temporaril­y withdraw excess from the market. Some will also be used to replenish carry- over stockpiles that have fallen in both Brazil and Vietnam.

“What the world ignores is that the carry in this year is small, so total availabili­ty is the same” in Vietnam, Alex Gruber, a director at RCMA Commoditie­s in the nation, said in an interview in Ho Chi Minh City. “In Brazil, the carry in is very low so the pipeline needs to be built out again.”

Coffee inventorie­s in Brazil will fall 61 per cent to 1.04 million bags by June 2018, according to Santos, Brazil-based exporter Comexim. In Vietnam, stockpiles fell 69 per cent to 1.18 million bags at the end of last season, the lowest since 2011 to 2012, the US Department of Agricultur­e estimates.

The market is also counting on a large crop in Brazil when there’s still a lot of time before the harvest starts, said Judith Ganes, president of J. Ganes Consulting. — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Workers carry bags of coffee beans during harvest at a plantation in Guaxupe, Brazil, on June 17. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Workers carry bags of coffee beans during harvest at a plantation in Guaxupe, Brazil, on June 17. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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