Showing posts with label Coffee 咖啡. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coffee 咖啡. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Indonesia coffee premiums fall, undercut Vietnam prices

Indonesia coffee premiums fall, undercut Vietnam prices

Premiums for Indonesian robusta fell to their weakest level since April on Thursday after farmers increased deliveries to raise cash ahead of a Muslim festival, spurring buying by local roasters.

The fall in premiums to $80-$100 a tonne, down from $200 last week, may also prompt foreign buying as sellers in rival producer Vietnam are still offering robusta at premiums of up to $130 to London futures, their highest in two years, dealers said.

Daily arrivals in the main growing island of Sumatra jumped to as high as 3,000 tonnes, compared with about 1,000 tonnes in mid-May. Indonesia, the world's third-largest coffee producer, is also the second-largest grower of robusta after Vietnam.

"The beans have been traded at $100 premiums FOB. We also see offers at $80 but only from small suppliers who want to sell 36 or 40 tonnes of beans," said a dealer in Sumatra, referring to the grade 4,80 defect robustas.

"Many trading houses are still focusing on fulfilling deliveries. Premiums have come down because supply is improving and also because London futures have gone up."

Dealers saw buying interest from local roasters and processed food producers, such as PT Mayora Indah. Strong domestic demand will boost Indonesia's consumption in 2013/14 by nearly a third to more than four million 60-kg bags, according to a Reuters poll.

Heavy rains during the current crop in Sumatra have disrupted deliveries from plantations and the drying of beans. Premiums jumped as high as $200 a tonne earlier this month, the highest since 2012, although deals were struck at $150 premiums.

Differentials for Vietnam's grade 2, 5 percent black and broken beans were steady at $100 to $130 a tonne this week as farmers held on to their beans, hoping for higher global prices and better returns.

Indonesia and Vietnam together account for nearly a quarter of the world's coffee output. Robusta is either blended with higher-quality arabica beans for a lower-cost brewed coffee or processed into instant coffee.

"We haven't bought more Vietnamese beans so far. We're trying to get more beans from Indonesia. It's still much cheaper. I think we should be able to get the 80 defect beans at less than $100 premiums in bulk," said a dealer in Singapore.

"You can see supply is coming in," he added.

Indonesian farmers were selling more beans to trading houses as the weather improved and because they also needed extra cash to celebrate Eid al-Fitr in early August, which marks the end of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

Indonesia is the world's most populous Muslim nation.

"Daily arrivals have improved to 2,500 to 3,000 tonnes since last week. I guess farmers need to cover their daily needs," said a dealer in Java, adding that sales had only gone to local buyers at present.

London September robusta ended up $4 at $1,950 a tonne on Wednesday, after jumping to $1,979, the highest price since May 24, tracking New York arabica on fears of a frost threat in top producer Brazil.


~News courtesy of Thanh Nien News~

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Coffee turns bitter for Vietnam exporters

Coffee turns bitter for Vietnam exporters


Debts and a fall in global prices have hit the coffee industry hard, with many exporters facing the threat of bankruptcy.

The Vietnam Coffee and Cocoa Association said exporters in the country, the world's biggest robusta producer, have bad and overdue bank debts of VND6.33 trillion (US$298.65 million).

In the first half of the year they exported only 795,000 tons, down 24 percent year-on-year. Their revenues were down 22 percent to $1.7 billion.

News website Saigon Times quoted an unidentified director at a Ho Chi Minh City-based coffee exporter as saying companies are left with no choice but export despite falling prices and losses of 10-20 percent to repay debts.

During the industry’s peak years in 2008-10 firms paid interest of 24 percent, so it is “understandable” that many are now drowning in debt since the interest rates are still very high but the situation has become adverse, the director said.

Domestic robusta prices fell to $1,740 a ton on June 14, the lowest in 16 months, according to the Promotion Center for Trade, Investment, and Tourism in Dak Lak Province, the nation’s main growing region.

In London, coffee futures for September delivery stood at $1,753 a ton on June 18, lower than the $2,120 level exporters had hoped for, according to news website VOV.

Last year 43 coffee exporters in Dak Lak alone defaulted on bank loans, the province's Department of Industry and Trade said.
v The southern province of Binh Duong had over 100 such borrowers.

Vicofa has proposed to the government a program to lend to exporters at low interest rates that would help them hold on to 200,000-300,000 tons of coffee and wait for prices to recover. The volume represents a fifth of the expected output in 2013-14.

The finance and agriculture ministries have asked the government to roll over the industry's loans for one to three years.

~News courtesy of Thanh Nien News~