LONDON: Arabica coffee prices on ICE slipped on Thursday after touching fresh 10-year peaks earlier in the session, as exchange-certified stocks touched new 20-year lows and were set to fall below the key 1-million-bags mark.
Coffee
May arabica coffee fell 0.8% to $2.5650 per lb at 1339 GMT, having hit its highest since September 2011 at $2.6045.
Top producer Brazil exported 2.9 million 60-kg bags of green coffee in January, 14% less than a year ago as a smaller crop and logistics bottlenecks limited shipments, exporters association Cecafe said.
Certified ICE arabica stocks fell to fresh 20-year lows of 1.04 million bags on Wednesday, down sharply from 1.54 million bags seen at the end of 2021.
Coffee farmers in Brazil had sold 86% of the 2021/22 crop by Feb. 8, outpacing the historical average of about 80%, consultancy Safras & Mercado said.
May robusta coffee fell 1.1% to $2,234 a tonne.
Top producer Vietnam exported 163,324 tonnes of coffee in January, down 3.6% from December last year, data showed.
Arabica coffee prices climb as exchange stocks fall
Sugar
March raw sugar fell 0.4% to 18.40 cents per lb, under pressure from renewed inflation worries that boosted the dollar.
A strong dollar makes dollar-priced assets like sugar costlier for non-US investors.
Dealers noted Indian sugar exports are ticking up and that with 2022/23 being seen in a small surplus, the upside is likely limited at the moment.
France's farm ministry said it sees the area sown with sugar beet for the 2022 harvest as stable to down 3%.
March white sugar, which expires on Friday, fell 1.1% to $508.50 a tonne.
Cocoa
May New York cocoa edged up 0.1% to $2,803 a tonne having hit its highest in more than a year at $2,817.
May London cocoa edged up 0.1% to 1,849 pounds per tonne, having hit its highest in nearly four months at 1,857.