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segunda-feira, 30 de setembro de 2013

Arabica-Coffee Futures Tick Up After Hard Fall
            
  NEW YORK - Short-covering boosted arabica coffee Monday morning after futures
settled at a more than four-year low during the previous session.
  Global supplies of coffee beans have swelled thanks to back-to-back bumper
crops from Brazil, the source of one-third of the world's coffee, and
recovering production from neighboring Colombia.
  Growers in Brazil are expected to harvest 47.5 million 60-kilogram
(132-pound) bags of coffee this year, a record for an "off-year" harvest,
government crop agency Conab has said.
  Arabica coffee for December delivery on the ICE Futures U.S. exchange was
recently 0.5% higher at $1.1425 a pound.
  Brazil's currency, which weakened to a more than one-week low on Friday, was
stronger Monday morning, curbing selling pressure in the market. A stronger
real discourages exports of coffee because producers receive less reais back
for their crops sold abroad in U.S. dollars.
Robusta Consolidates After Hitting 3-year Low Friday
Neena Rai

  LONDON - Robusta coffee futures consolidated in early European trading Monday,
after a sharp slide last week prompted by expectations of a bumper coffee crop
out of top producer Vietnam.
  At 1015 GMT, November robusta coffee futures traded 0.7% higher at $1,622 a
metric ton. Friday, robusta coffee futures hit their lowest level since Oct. 8,
2010, as Vietnam's harvest got underway.
  Brokers said that local Vietnamese prices for robusta were also edging
towards three-year lows of around $1.65 a kilogram on expectations that around
29 million 60-kilogram bags will be harvested in the 2013-14 crop year.
  Elsewhere, European Union wheat futures were steady ahead of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's report on inventories.
  November Paris milling wheat futures traded 0.1% higher at EUR193.75 a ton.
  Morgan Stanley expects a "modestly bullish" report, though it noted that the
next crop report, due Oct. 11, will likely have a much larger impact on price
direction for the remainder of the year.
  "Wheat stocks may prove bullish on lower production and strong feeding," the
bank said.
  It forecasts wheat stocks 18 million bushels lower than overall consensus,
because U.S. production was slightly lower than the USDA's 2.11 billion bushel
estimate that kept U.S. wheat strong in the June-August quarter.
  Cocoa futures for December delivery slipped 0.1% to GBP1,708 a ton. Dealers
said they awaited the Commitment of Traders report due at noon, which should
indicate further insight regarding speculative interest in the market.
  December Liffe sugar futures slipped 0.1% to $478.30 a ton. Commerzbank said
sugar futures continue to come under pressure from a weak Brazilian real.
  "The currency of the world's biggest sugar producer and exporter depreciated
last week at a rate last seen in August," it said. "The market has not been
surprised, though, by Sucden analysts predicting a 1.5% drop in sugar
production in the main cultivation area Centre-South in the 2013/14 season,
especially since this seems to be a rather optimistic estimate given the
figures available so far," it said.