Source: Barchart
Date: May 20, 2026
- July arabica coffee closed down 0.68% on Wednesday, while July robusta fell 0.51% to a one month low.
- Arabica hit a one and a half year low on Tuesday amid an improved global supply outlook.
- The Coffee Trading Academy projects Brazil’s 2026/27 harvest will increase 12% year on year to 71.4 million bags.
- Marex Group and StoneX both forecast record Brazilian crops above 75 million bags for 2026/27.
- StoneX projects the 2026 global coffee surplus will expand to 10 million bags, the largest in six years.
- Vietnam coffee exports rose 15.8% in the first four months of 2026, reaching 810,000 metric tons.
- ICE robusta inventories hit a two year low last Friday but recovered slightly on Wednesday.
Coffee prices settled lower on Wednesday, May 20, 2026, with robusta falling to a one month low. Expectations of a larger Brazilian coffee crop continue to weigh on prices. July arabica coffee futures closed down 0.68%, and July ICE robusta coffee closed down 0.51%.
Prices have ratcheted lower over the past month, with arabica falling to a one and a half year near term low on Tuesday amid an improved global supply outlook. On May 7, the Coffee Trading Academy projected Brazil’s 2026/27 coffee harvest would increase 12 percent year on year to 71.4 million bags. On March 19, Marex Group projected a record Brazilian crop of 75.9 million bags, surpassing Sucafina’s forecast of 75.4 million bags. On March 12, StoneX raised its Brazil 2026/27 production estimate to a record 75.3 million bags, up from a November estimate of 70.7 million bags. StoneX also projected the 2026 global coffee surplus would expand to 10 million bags from 1.8 million bags in 2025, the largest surplus in six years.
Vietnam Exports and ICE Inventories
Soaring coffee exports from Vietnam, the world’s largest robusta producer, are bearish for robusta prices. On May 9, Vietnam’s National Statistics Office reported that the country’s coffee exports in the first four months of 2026 rose 15.8 percent year on year to 810,000 metric tons. Vietnam’s 2025 coffee exports jumped 17.5 percent to 1.58 million metric tons. Production for the 2025/26 season is projected to climb 6 percent to a four year high of 1.76 million metric tons, equivalent to 29.4 million bags.
ICE coffee inventories have trended lower over the past two months, which typically supports prices. ICE robusta inventories fell to a two year low of 3,631 lots last Friday, though they recovered to a two and a half week high of 3,845 lots on Wednesday. ICE arabica coffee inventories fell to a two and three quarter month low of 456,462 bags on Wednesday.
Brazil Exports and Supply Disruptions
Smaller exports from Brazil are supportive of coffee prices. Last Tuesday, Cecafe reported that Brazil’s April green coffee exports fell 1.3 percent year on year to 2.76 million bags. The ongoing closure of the Strait of Hormuz has disrupted global coffee supplies and is bullish for prices. The closure has tightened supplies by increasing shipping rates, insurance, fertilizer and fuel costs, raising costs for importers and roasters.
As a bearish factor, the International Coffee Organization reported on November 7 that global coffee exports for the current marketing year (October to September) fell 0.3 percent year on year to 138.658 million bags.
USDA Production Forecasts
| Indicator | 2025/26 Forecast |
|---|---|
| World coffee production | 178.848 million bags (+2.0% y/y record) |
| Arabica production | 95.515 million bags (-4.7% y/y) |
| Robusta production | 83.333 million bags (+10.9% y/y) |
| Brazil production | 63 million bags (-3.1% y/y) |
| Vietnam production | 30.8 million bags (+6.2% y/y, 4 year high) |
| Ending stocks | 20.148 million bags (-5.4% y/y) |
The USDA’s Foreign Agriculture Service bi-annual report of December 18 projected that world coffee production in 2025/26 would increase 2.0 percent year on year to a record 178.848 million bags. Within that total, arabica production is expected to decrease 4.7 percent to 95.515 million bags, while robusta production is forecast to rise 10.9 percent to 83.333 million bags. The USDA also forecast Brazil’s 2025/26 coffee production would decline 3.1 percent to 63 million bags, while Vietnam’s output would rise 6.2 percent to a four year high of 30.8 million bags. Ending stocks for 2025/26 are projected to fall 5.4 percent to 20.148 million bags from 21.307 million bags in 2024/25.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
1. Why are coffee prices falling?
Coffee prices are under pressure mainly due to expectations of a larger Brazilian coffee crop for 2026/27 and surging exports from Vietnam, pointing to a global surplus.
2. How low did arabica coffee prices go?
July arabica coffee futures fell to a one and a half year low on May 19, 2026, closing down 0.68% on May 20.
3. What is the projected Brazilian coffee crop for 2026/27?
The Coffee Trading Academy projects 71.4 million bags, while Marex Group and StoneX project record crops above 75 million bags.
4. How much did Vietnam’s coffee exports increase?
Vietnam’s coffee exports rose 15.8 percent in the first four months of 2026 compared to the same period last year, reaching 810,000 metric tons.
5. What is the expected global coffee surplus for 2026?
StoneX projects the 2026 global coffee surplus will expand to 10 million bags, the largest surplus in six years.
6. How does the Strait of Hormuz closure affect coffee prices?
The closure disrupts global coffee supplies by increasing shipping rates, insurance, and fuel costs, which is a bullish factor supporting prices.
Published: May 20, 2026

