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Been watching coffee futures lately and the price action has been pretty mixed. May arabica closed slightly up on Friday while robusta got hit harder, but honestly both are consolidating after taking some serious losses over the past few weeks. Dollar weakness gave things a small bounce, but that's about it.
The real pressure is coming from supply side. Brazil's looking at a massive crop this year - their forecasting agency just said production could jump over 17% to hit a record. Arabica specifically is supposed to jump 23%, which is huge. Plus Vietnam keeps pumping out robusta coffee at record levels. Their January exports surged nearly 40% year-over-year, so that's weighing on robusta coffee price today pretty hard. When you've got bumper crops everywhere, prices just can't catch a bid.
What's interesting though is that ICE inventories have actually recovered from their lows. Arabica stocks bounced back to a 3.75-month high, and robusta did the same. That's bearish for prices in the near term. On the flip side, Colombia's production is down significantly, which is one of the few supportive factors. But it's not enough to offset what's happening globally.
If you follow commodity analysis from sources like Barchart, the consensus seems to be that we're looking at record global production coming, which means prices probably stay under pressure. The USDA's projecting world production to hit a new high around 179 million bags. So unless something changes with weather or demand, I'd expect coffee to keep consolidating these losses rather than bouncing back anytime soon.