Brazil farmers poised to push coffee price higher

Fri Jul 11, 2008 5:36pm EDT
 
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By Peter Murphy

GUAXUPE, Brazil (Reuters) - The rising cost of fertilizer and farm labor is squeezing profits from coffee in leading global grower Brazil but tight supplies should strengthen growers' hands when haggling at the farm gate.

Fertilizer prices have as much as doubled in less than a year for some producers, depending on their region's soil quality, and labor costs have been climbing amid a sustained commodity-driven economic boom.

Farmers say the final blow has been the constant appreciation of the local currency, eroding income for growers as it strengthens against the U.S. dollar in which arabica is traded on the futures market.

New York arabica futures are at $1.42 a lb, up about 25 percent from July 2007.

But a dollar bought 1.9 reais this time last year, and only 1.6 now, a fall of 15 percent, wiping out most of the rise in coffee prices over the same period. When the rise in fertilizer, agrochemical, fuel, debt and labor costs in reais weigh in, farmers say they are worse off.

But their lot could take a turn for the better.

Farmer cooperatives and exporters say tight supplies on the domestic market, which a governmental agency says have fallen to a record low this year, could put the grower in a strong position when it comes to striking a sale.

"Yes, basically. In many cases," said John Wolthers, a trader at the Comexim coffee trader based in Brazil's port town Santos in Sao Paulo state when asked if market conditions could give Brazilian farmers the upper hand in physical sales.

"We have never seen such a difficult in-between period," he said, referring to the inter-harvest lull and domestic coffee stocks which are at record-low levels.

He said higher world prices in the last few weeks, which peaked at about $1.57 per lb, had spurred exporters to buy beans up until a subsequent fall to about $1.40, which had wrung profits out of the transactions.

"Now (trade) is completely paralyzed," he said.

SUBSIDY CUSHION

A government subsidy scheme known as the Pepro, which gives growers a cash supplement whenever they sell their coffee within a certain price range, but not below it, gives growers a strong incentive to hold out for the best possible price.

And annual government-subsidized loans for farmers to cover costs and tide them over until the harvest could leave some even more comfortably placed to wait for an upturn in prices before parting with their beans.

"It's certain the market will rise. I think it'll be $1.50 to $1.70 in the next two months. Farmers' costs are up and they won't sell at any price," said Lucio de Araujo Dias, a trader at the world's largest coffee cooperative, Cooxupe.  Continued...

 
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