Coffee Hits New High, But Could It Move Even Higher?

 | Nov 26, 2021 06:36

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com.

  • Brazil is the leading Arabica coffee producer
  • A frost in July lifted the price to a multi-year high
  • Two other Brazilian agricultural commodities rallied to the highest prices in years
  • Coffee makes a higher high in November
  • The fourth trip to $3 per pound could be on the horizon

Coffee futures on the Intercontinental Exchange were below the $1 per pound level in July 2020 when they eclipsed the level and have not looked back. One year later, in July 2021, the price doubled, moving over the $2 level for the first time since October 2014.

Bull markets rarely move in a straight line, and corrections can be brutal, shaking the confidence of the most committed bulls. Coffee’s upside percolation ended in July, with the price dropping to a low of $1.7160 per pound in August. In October, the price climbed back over the $2 level, and in November, after consolidating and digesting the previous gains, coffee futures rose to a new high above the 2014 peak.

Coffee futures have risen during an almost perfect bullish storm for the soft commodity. Aside from inflation and supply chain bottlenecks, the weather in the critical growing region has not cooperated with Arabica coffee bean production.

h2 Brazil is the leading Arabica coffee producer/h2

Brazil dominates the soft commodities arena. Sugar, coffee, cocoa, cotton, and frozen concentrated orange juice futures are the members of the sector that trade on the Intercontinental Exchange. Brazil is the world’s leading producer and exporter of free-market sugarcane, Arabica coffee beans, and oranges.

While Brazil is a political and economic mess, its soil and climate make it one of the leading commodity-producing nations worldwide. The weather conditions in Brazil are critical for annual sugar, coffee, and orange crops.

Meanwhile, Brazil has suffered along with the rest of the world during the global pandemic. The country has the second most fatalities at over 612,000 and is third for infections, behind the US and India, with over 22 million confirmed COVID-19 cases. The virus has caused significant issues with the Brazilian labor force and supply chain. Rising energy prices have also made it far more costly to ship the soft commodities to consumers worldwide.

h2 A frost in July lifted the price to a multi-year high/h2

While the impact of the pandemic put upward pressure on sugar, coffee, and orange prices, a frost in July added insult to injury, pushing prices to multi-year highs. Coffee plants and trees suffered the most from the cold conditions as many coffee farms lost their annual production. In July, as the cold weather did its damage, ICE Arabica coffee futures rose above the technical resistance level at the November 2016 $1.76 per pound high, reaching over $2 for the first time since 2014.

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Sugar and orange juice futures also experienced frost-related rallies, sending prices to multi-year highs.

h2 Two other Brazilian agricultural commodities rallied to the highest prices in years/h2

The start of the global pandemic in 2020 weighed on markets across all asset classes, and Brazilian soft commodities were no exception. The price of nearby sugar futures fell to the lowest level since 2007, when they reached a bottom at 9.05 cents per pound in April 2020.