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Coffee Jump Prompts Vietnam Growers to Hoard Most in Five Years

By Publications Checkout
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Coffee Jump Prompts Vietnam Growers to Hoard Most in Five Years

Coffee growers in Vietnam are storing the most beans in at least five years as they bet the biggest surge in prices in 16 months has further to run.

Farmers held 28 per cent of the crop in the world's largest robusta producer at the end of last month, according to the median of eight trader estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Unsold inventories totaled 440,000 metric tonnes, the survey showed. That compares with 250,000 tonnes, or 15 per cent of the crop, held at this time in the previous season.

Futures in London last month rose the most since February 2014 while beans in Vietnam’s main growing region of Dak Lak jumped to the highest in two months. While that’s encouraging farmers to hold supplies in anticipation of higher prices, surging stockpiles may drive prices lower when the next harvest starts in October, according to Anh Minh, the country’s largest private exporter by volume.

“I want to wait for good prices,” said Tran Thanh Nga, a 32-year-old farmer who hasn’t sold any beans from her four-ton stockpile. “Prices rose in late June but they were not high enough for me.

Robusta on ICE Futures Europe settled at $1,738 a tonne on Monday after prices surged 9.3 per cent in June. In Vietnam, beans traded at 36,800 dong ($1.69) a kilogram on Monday after climbing to 39,000 dong on June 25, the highest since April 24, according to data from the Trade & Tourism Center in Dak Lak.

News by Bloomberg, edited by ESM

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