
HANOI/BANDAR LAMPUNG: Coffee prices in Vietnam hit their lowest in nearly 2-1/2 years following global cues, while trading in Indonesia was thin at the end of its main harvest season, traders said on Thursday.
Farmers in Vietnam, the world’s second-biggest coffee producer after Brazil, offered coffee at around 32,500 dong-33,300 dong (US$1.39-US$1.43) per kg in the province of Daklak, the lowest since April 2016, traders said.
International markets recovered slightly on Wednesday but prices are still unattractively low, said Phan Hung Anh, deputy director of Anh Minh Co, a coffee-trading firm in Daklak province, Vietnam’s major coffee growing area.
November robusta coffee settled up US$26, or 1.8%, at US$1,501 per tonne on Wednesday. The second-month contract had slumped to a 2-1/2-year low of US$1,465 on Tuesday.
Exporters offered Vietnam’s 5% black and broken grade 2 robusta at US$40-US$70 discount to London’s November contract, while importers sought a US$60-US$70 discount, traders said.
Traders expected coffee exports this month to dip to 90,000 tonnes-120,000 tonnes from 135,000 tonnes in August, citing low prices and as Vietnam is heading towards the end of its crop season. The 2018/2019 crop season starts in October.
In Indonesia, premiums for the grade 4 defect 80 robusta in the province of Lampung were at US$90 to the November contract or US$130-US$140 to the January contract, traders said. Last week, premiums were at US$100 to the November contract.
“Prices are already stable, and this is predicted to continue for the next two weeks,” one coffee trader told Reuters, adding trade was thin as harvest would end this month.
Another trader said harvest was almost over in some areas like Bengkulu and Talang Padang, and Palembang.
Indonesia exported 11,633.8 tonnes of robusta coffee beans from the Lampung province in August, down 67% from the same month last year, government data showed.