Caught an interesting coffee market move on Thursday. Arabica bounced back from early weakness after the Brazilian real spiked to a 2.25-month high against the dollar. Stronger currency usually means Brazilian producers hold back exports since they get paid less in local terms, which creates some short covering in the futures. Classic setup.



But here's where it gets messy. Rain forecasts for Minas Gerais, Brazil's main arabica region, initially pressured prices earlier in the day. The Weather Channel is calling for showers most days this week. Meanwhile, ICE inventories just recovered to a 2.5-month high of 461,829 bags after hitting a 1.75-year low back in November. That's bearish.

On the supply side, Brazil's December coffee exports actually fell 18.4% overall, with arabica down 10% year-over-year. That should support prices. But here's the catch - Conab just raised Brazil's 2025 production forecast by 2.4% to 56.54 million bags. And Vietnam's robusta output keeps climbing, up 17.5% this year to 1.58 million metric tons. According to Barchart's commodity tracking, global coffee supplies are looking more ample heading into 2025/26.

The real question: is this a bounce in arabica on currency strength or just noise before bigger supply pressure hits? Barchart's data shows USDA forecasting world production at a record 178.8 million bags next season. That's a lot of coffee coming. The mixed signals make this tricky to trade right now.
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