LONDON: World arabica coffee price benchmarks climbed above US$3.20 per lb on Wednesday to hit their highest in nearly half a century with farmers in Brazil still reluctant to sell and speculators piling in.
Farmers in Brazil, who grow almost half the world's arabica, have sold up to 70 per cent of the current crop and are in no rush to sell forward next year's crop, betting on even higher prices, according to dealers and industry experts.
Meanwhile two industry sources told Reuters there is talk that a medium sized coffee trader in Brazil has run out of cash.
"Brazil farmers are not interested in selling, the trade has no cash and can't sell or put on new hedges, and speculators will certainly not sell, so there are not many sellers," said a coffee expert at one of the world's top agricultural trade houses.
He added talk of traders running out of cash was not helping, and that while it remains unclear where the rally will end, it is likely a solution to the shortage will not appear anytime soon.
March arabica coffee futures on the ICE exchange, used to set physical coffee prices around the world, rose 4.6 per cent to US$3.2305 per lb, having hit their highest since 1977 earlier at US$3.2615.
The contract is up more than 70 per cent this year, while January robusta coffee, used to price the cheaper coffee variety typically used in instant coffee blends, rose 6.9 per cent to US$5,533 a metric ton.
Arabica and robusta are to some extent fungible, so shortages in one often increase demand and prices for the other.
Trader Sucafina said fears producers might default or delay deliveries coupled with increased hedging costs - due to pricier margin calls - are leading to panic, tempting traders to close out their hedges by buying futures.
Next year's Brazil crop appears to have lost some potential following the drought earlier this year, with soil moisture still low despite recent rains, and fears the current flowers may not attach to the branches and form cherries for picking.
"A mix of rain (and) dry periods are expected into next week, but the condition of the trees is the main question," said broker ADMISI.
There are also worries meanwhile that the harvest in top robusta producer Vietnam has been delayed by heavy rains.
In other soft commodities traded, March raw sugar rose 0.6 per cent to 21.69 cents per lb, having marked seven consecutive weeks of losses last week, while March white sugar gained 0.9 per cent to US$560.20 a tonne.
March London cocoa settled down 194 pounds, or 2.5 per cent, to 7,443 pounds per ton, having hit a five-month high of 7,678 pounds on Tuesday, while March New York cocoa fell 1.8 per cent to US$9,068 a tonne.