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Brazil launches measures to boost coffee prices

Government will buy up supply as bumper crop is expected

 

By Jeffrey T. Lewis and Alexandra


August 7, 2013

Brazil will buy arabica coffee beans to help prop up coffee growers' incomes as prices languish, President Dilma Rousseff said Wednesday.

The purchases will be made through two programs. In one, the government will offer growers options contracts to sell as many as three million 60-kilogram (132-pound) bags of coffee at 343 reais ($149) per bag, the president said. The contracts will have a delivery date in March 2014, she said.

In the other program, the government will buy coffee at a reference price of 307 reais per bag, starting immediately, Ms. Rousseff said, although she didn't give more details on that program. The agriculture ministry couldn't immediately provide more details, either.

The prices are above the current 285 reais per bag that growers receive in Brazil. Global prices have also been much lower this year than last, and some Brazilian growers had organized protests earlier this year to demand government action to support the market.

"Growers who need resources in the short term can now get them," Ms. Rousseff said in a speech in the town of Varginha, in the state of Minas Gerais, which was shown on a government website. Producers "will have better conditions to both grow and sell" their coffee, she said.

Francisco Ourique, superintendent of coffee for the Cooparaiso cooperative that represents more than 2,500 growers, said the programs would have two positive effects.

"First, if the market doesn't want the coffee, the government will take it at a price we know, and second, the whole system now has a price reference to work with," Mr. Ourique said.

Producers can use the government prices to estimate their income and borrow money accordingly, he said.

The options contracts have proved a bargain for the government in the past. After the options have been offered, the price of coffee in markets has risen to the level offered in the contracts, freeing the government of the need to actually buy the beans.

Indeed, arabica-coffee futures rose on the news, with the contract for September delivery on the ICE Futures U.S. exchange recently up 2.5% at $1.2085 a pound. But even with Wednesday's gains, arabica prices are down 16% this year, mainly on expectations for a record off-year coffee harvest.

Brazil's two-year coffee production cycle is characterized by alternating years of higher and lower productivity, and 2013 is a down year. But dry, temperate weather in Brazil's main growing regions is expected to help this year's harvest come close to last year's record.

Options "could help ease the glut" of coffee in Brazil, said Chris Narayanan, head of agricultural commodities research at Société Générale in New York, said earlier this week.

But the extent of the government's measures will dictate how much, if at all, the move will boost prices on the global market, Mr. Narayanan said. "It's still a large supply that's out there."

The International Coffee Organization forecasts that Brazil will reap a crop of 48.6 million bags this year. Last year's crop was a record 50.8 million bags.

Coffee growers in other countries are also complaining about prices. In Colombia, the second-biggest producer of arabica beans after Brazil, coffee farmers recently announced their second strike of the year, slated to begin Aug. 19.

Growers in Colombia intend to pressure the government to increase their government subsidies. The Colombian government has so far refused the requests, saying coffee farmers already get more subsidies than any other sector in the country.

Corrections & Amplifications

Brazil's government will offer growers options contracts to sell as many as three million 60-kilogram (132-pound) bags of coffee at 343 reais ($149) per bag. An earlier version of this article said the price was 346 reais because of a misstatement by President Dilma Rousseff.
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Leslie Josephs and Dan Molinski contributed to this article.

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