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Coffee Prices Soar to New 2-Month Highs Amid Brazil Frost and Falling Exports

Dubai, August 16, 2025 (Qahwa World) – Coffee prices surged to their highest levels in two months on Friday, driven by frost concerns in Brazil, declining exports, and tightening global inventories. The rally pushed September Arabica coffee (KCU25) up 4.64% to close at +15.15, while September Robusta coffee (RMU25) gained 2.86% at +117. Over the week, Arabica rose +10.4% and Robusta +18%, marking one of the strongest weekly rallies of the year.

Brazil Frost Sparks Market Tensions

Early this week, a light frost was reported in Cerrado Mineiro, one of Brazil’s key Arabica-producing regions. While crop damage was limited, the event renewed market fears over frost risks during Brazil’s winter season. Weather events in Brazil remain a critical factor in global coffee price volatility.

Sharp Decline in Brazilian Exports

Brazil, the world’s largest coffee exporter, reported a 20.4% year-on-year drop in July unroasted coffee exports to 161,000 MT, according to its Trade Ministry. Exporter group Cecafe confirmed a steep decline, with green coffee exports down 28% y/y to 2.4 million bags. Within this, Arabica exports fell -21%, while Robusta exports plunged -49%.
From January to July, Brazil shipped 22.2 million bags, down -21% compared with last year.

Inventories at Multi-Year Lows

Declining ICE warehouse stocks further fueled bullish momentum. Arabica inventories hit a 1.25-year low of 726,661 bags on Thursday before rebounding slightly to 731,739 on Friday. Robusta inventories fell to a three-week low of 6,907 lots, below the recent two-year high of 7,029 lots reached in late July.

U.S. Tariffs Add Uncertainty

The market is awaiting clarity on U.S. trade policy, as President Trump has yet to exempt coffee from the proposed 50% tariff on Brazilian exports. Such a move could raise domestic inventories in Brazil while reshaping global trade flows.

Weather and Harvest Update

Above-average rainfall in Minas Gerais, Brazil’s largest Arabica region, brought 4.8 mm of precipitation last week, or 109% of the historical average, easing dryness concerns but weighing slightly on prices.
Meanwhile, Brazil’s 2025/26 harvest is nearing completion. Safras & Mercado reported 94% progress as of August 6, ahead of last year’s 92%. Cooxupe, Brazil’s largest cooperative, said its members had completed 80.4% of the harvest by August 8.

Global Coffee Exports and Vietnam Outlook

On the supply side, the International Coffee Organization (ICO) noted that global coffee exports rose +7.3% y/y in June to 11.69 million bags. However, cumulative exports from October to June dipped slightly by -0.2% y/y at 104.14 million bags.

Vietnam, the world’s second-largest producer, continues to face challenges. The country’s 2023/24 output fell 20% y/y to 1.472 million MT, the lowest in four years, due to drought. Exports in 2024 dropped -17.1% to 1.35 million MT. However, from January to July 2025, Vietnam’s shipments rose 6.9% y/y to 1.05 million MT, offering partial recovery.

USDA and Volcafe Projections

The USDA’s Foreign Agriculture Service (FAS) expects world coffee production to hit a record 178.68 million bags in 2025/26, up 2.5% year-on-year. Robusta output is forecast to surge by +7.9% to 81.65 million bags, while Arabica is projected to decline -1.7% to 97.02 million bags.
Despite this, Volcafe projects a widening global Arabica deficit of -8.5 million bags for 2025/26 – the fifth straight year of supply shortfalls – compared with a -5.5 million bag deficit last season.

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