Coffee Prices End the Week Higher as the Brazilian Real Strengthens

Dubai – Qahwa World

March arabica coffee (KCH26) finished Friday’s session up by +1.50 (+0.40%), while January ICE robusta (RMF26) added +26 (+0.57%).

Coffee futures reached their highest levels in a week on Friday, supported by a stronger Brazilian real. As the real (^USDBRL) advanced to a one-week peak against the US dollar, Brazilian growers were less inclined to sell, prompting short covering in the market.

Weather concerns continue to contribute to upward pressure on prices. Arabica markets are receiving support from ongoing dryness in Brazil. Somar Meteorologia reported that Minas Gerais—Brazil’s largest arabica-producing region—recorded 26.4 mm of rainfall in the week ending November 21, representing just 49% of the long-term average. Robusta prices are also firm as forecasts predict heavy rains across Dak Lak in Vietnam, the country’s key coffee-growing province, which are expected to further postpone the current harvest.

Falling ICE coffee stockpiles remain a bullish factor. US tariffs on Brazilian coffee imports have sharply reduced inventories. Arabica stocks monitored by ICE dropped to 398,645 bags last Thursday, the lowest level in 1.75 years, while robusta inventories hit a 6.5-month low of 4,530 lots on Friday. American importers have canceled new orders from Brazil due to tariff pressures, tightening domestic supply. Between August and October—after the tariffs were introduced—US purchases of Brazilian coffee fell by 52% year-on-year to 983,970 bags. Roughly one-third of the coffee imported unroasted into the US typically originates from Brazil.

Last Friday, arabica futures slumped to a 7-week low after President Trump signed an executive order late Thursday removing tariff restrictions on Brazilian food goods, including the 40% levy previously applied to Brazilian coffee.

On the bearish side, StoneX projected last Wednesday that Brazil could produce 70.7 million bags of coffee in the 2026/27 marketing year, including 47.2 million bags of arabica—a 29% increase from the previous year.

Robusta markets also face pressure from expanding supply out of Vietnam. Data from the Vietnam National Statistics Office on November 6 showed that coffee exports for January–October 2025 rose by 13.4% year-on-year to 1.31 million metric tons. Production for the 2025/26 season is expected to grow by 6% year-on-year to 1.76 million metric tons (29.4 million bags), reaching a four-year high. In addition, the Vietnam Coffee and Cocoa Association (Vicofa) stated on October 24 that, provided weather conditions remain favorable, the country’s 2025/26 crop could exceed last year’s output by 10%. Vietnam remains the world’s largest producer of robusta.

Signs of tightening global supply continue to underpin prices. The International Coffee Organization (ICO) reported on November 7 that global coffee exports for the ongoing marketing year (October–September) slipped by 0.3% year-on-year to 138.658 million bags.

Further support emerged after Brazil’s crop agency Conab reduced its 2025 arabica production estimate on September 4. The new estimate stands at 35.2 million bags, down 4.9% from the May forecast of 37.0 million bags. Conab also revised the country’s total 2025 coffee crop downward to 55.2 million bags, compared with the earlier estimate of 55.7 million bags.

According to the USDA’s Foreign Agriculture Service (FAS) outlook released on June 25, global coffee production for 2025/26 is expected to rise by 2.5% year-on-year to a record 178.68 million bags. The report anticipates arabica production will fall by 1.7% to 97.022 million bags, while robusta output will rise 7.9% to 81.658 million bags. FAS also forecasts Brazil’s 2025/26 crop increasing by 0.5% to 65 million bags and Vietnam’s output jumping 6.9% to 31 million bags, marking a four-year high. Ending stocks for 2025/26 are projected to grow by 4.9% to 22.819 million bags, up from 21.752 million bags in 2024/25.

Arabica Coffee Prices Dip as Brazil Rains and Tariff Talks Pressure Market

Dubai – Qahwa World

Arabica coffee prices fell on Wednesday as forecasts of rainfall in Brazil’s coffee belt and renewed trade discussions between Brazil and the United States triggered selling in the futures market.

On the ICE exchange, December Arabica (KCZ25) dropped by –4.75 points (–1.19%), while November Robusta (RMX25) rose by +55 points (+1.23%). The session began with an upward trend but later reversed, with traders reacting to changing weather expectations and tariff concerns.

Traders who had bet on prolonged dry conditions liquidated positions after new forecasts showed that Brazil’s main coffee-growing regions would receive rain later this week. The shift came just after reports of drought-related stress in Minas Gerais, where rainfall during the week ending October 11 reached only 48% of the historical average, raising concerns for the crucial flowering phase of the 2026/27 crop.

Market sentiment also shifted after Bloomberg reported that Brazilian Foreign Affairs Minister Mauro Vieira is set to meet U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Thursday to discuss tariffs. The talks come amid ongoing U.S. import tariffs of 50% on Brazilian coffee, which have already reduced shipments and tightened U.S. supplies.

ICE-monitored arabica inventories fell to a 1.5-year low of 494,558 bags, while robusta inventories slipped to 6,200 lots, their lowest in nearly three months. Meanwhile, the NOAA recently raised the likelihood of a La Niña event to 71% for October–December, potentially bringing drier conditions to Brazil and heightening risks for the next harvest.

In contrast, Vietnam’s Central Highlands, the country’s main coffee zone, is forecast to receive above-average rainfall through October 20 — with Dak Lak province expecting 70 mm, compared with a historical average of 61 mm. The favorable weather supports a strong 2025/26 robusta crop, with production projected to rise by 6% year-on-year to 1.76 million tons (29.4 million bags) — a four-year high.

According to the Vietnam National Statistics Office, coffee exports in the first nine months of 2025 climbed 10.9% year-on-year to 1.23 million tons, adding to global supply pressures.

The U.S. Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) projects 2025/26 global coffee production at a record 178.68 million bags, up 2.5% from the previous year. Arabica output is expected to decline 1.7%, while robusta rises 7.9%.

Brazil’s total coffee production is forecast at 65 million bags, up 0.5%, while Vietnam’s is seen reaching 31 million bags, up 6.9%.

However, global trading firm Volcafe anticipates an arabica deficit of 8.5 million bags for 2025/26 — the fifth consecutive annual shortfall.