Coffee Prices Continue to Rise as Global Supplies Decline
Dubai, 4 September 2025 (Qahwa World) – Coffee prices closed higher on Wednesday amid tightening global supplies, with both arabica and robusta contracts gaining momentum. December arabica futures (KCZ25) rose by +3.30 cents (+0.89%), while November robusta (RMX25) advanced by +55 USD (+1.25%), bouncing back from a recent 1.5-week low.
The International Coffee Organization (ICO) reported that global coffee exports in July dropped -1.6% year-on-year to 11.6 million bags, while cumulative exports for October to July slipped -0.3% to 115.6 million bags. This contraction, combined with falling exchange-monitored inventories, supported the market. ICE-monitored robusta inventories fell to a 1-month low of 6,552 lots, while arabica stocks declined to a 1.25-year low of 686,863 bags.
Concerns about tighter U.S. coffee supplies also added support, as American buyers canceled contracts for Brazilian coffee following the 50% tariffs imposed on Brazilian exports to the U.S. Since Brazil supplies about a third of unroasted coffee to the American market, the move is further tightening availability.
In Brazil, above-average rainfall has eased crop concerns ahead of the crucial flowering period. Somar Meteorologia reported that Minas Gerais, the country’s largest arabica-growing area, received 163% of the historical average rainfall during the last week of August. Meanwhile, the harvest is nearly complete, with Cooxupé, Brazil’s largest cooperative, announcing that 94.9% of its members’ harvest was done by August 29, while Safras & Mercado estimated the national harvest at 99% complete as of August 20. Despite this, export data reflects a slowdown, with Brazil’s Ministry of Trade reporting that July unroasted coffee exports plunged -20.4% y/y to 161,000 MT, and exporter group Cecafé noting that green coffee shipments fell -28% y/y to 2.4 million bags, including a -49% drop in robusta exports.
Vietnam, the world’s leading robusta producer, continues to face drought-related challenges. Production for the 2023/24 crop fell -20% y/y to 1.47 MMT, the smallest in four years, while 2024 exports declined -17.1% y/y to 1.35 MMT. The Vietnam Coffee and Cocoa Association has revised its 2024/25 production outlook downward to 26.5 million bags, though the National Statistics Office reported a +6.9% y/y increase in January–July 2025 exports, reaching 1.05 MMT.
Looking ahead, the USDA’s Foreign Agriculture Service projects that world coffee production in 2025/26 will climb +2.5% y/y to a record 178.7 million bags. This includes a -1.7% decline in arabica output to 97 million bags and a +7.9% increase in robusta to 81.6 million bags, with ending stocks expected to rise +4.9% to 22.8 million bags. However, trader Volcafé forecasts a global arabica deficit of -8.5 million bags for 2025/26, deeper than the -5.5 million bag deficit recorded in 2024/25, marking the fifth consecutive year of arabica shortfalls despite stronger robusta production.