After A Rough 2 Years, Will Coffee Be Percolating On The Upside Again?

 | Jun 01, 2020 03:02

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  •  A rough time for coffee producers in 2018 and 2019
  • Brazil is the leader in output
  • 2008-2011 could provide clues for the soft commodity

Arabica coffee beans trade in the futures market on the Intercontinental Exchange ICE. Coffee is a member of the highly volatile, soft commodity sector of the asset class. As an agricultural commodity, one of the most significant factors for the path of least resistance of the price of coffee beans is the weather in the leading growing regions of the world. Each year is a new adventure in the coffee market because of the weather, as well as the short-shelf life of the product. Coffee beans can only sit in storage facilities for a brief period before they lose aroma and potency.

While supplies of coffee each year can vary significantly, the demand side of the fundamental equation continues to be an ever-increasing factor. At the turn of this century, approximately six million people populated our planet. According to the US Census Bureau, over the past two decades, the number has grown by 27.5% to more than 7.65 billion.

The addressable market for coffee has been accelerating by leaps and bounds. Aside from population growth, more people in Asia have switched from tea to coffee consumption. Over the past years, Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) opened over 5000 stores in China, and many other copycat coffee shops have popped up in the world’s most populous nation. Each year, the demand for coffee beans increases and production must keep up with the trend in consumption.

Since the early 1970s, the price of coffee futures on ICE has traded as low as 41.50 cents per pound and as high as $3.375 per pound. Coffee is a highly volatile commodity, and at just below the $1 level at the end of last week, it was closer to the long-term low than the high. Coffee is near the low end of its pricing cycle.

h2 Rough time for coffee producers in 2018 and 2019/h2

Before 2018, the last time coffee futures on ICE traded below $1 per pound was in 2006.