Brazil ’15 Coffee Crop Will Be Below 40m Bags, Ganes-Chase Says
By Marvin G. Perez
Sept. 30 (Bloomberg) -- “Every week that passes without enough rain is going to make the situation worse,” Judy Ganes-Chase, president of J. Ganes Consulting in Panama City, Panama, said yday in telephone interview
- Forecast compares with projection of 49.5m bags this yr by USDA, which “‘was probably overestimated’’ by as much as 3m bags
- ‘‘Coming into this season, potential was already low, from 43m to 44m bags, hurt by high pruning, lack of vegetative growth and lack of fertilizer”
- NOTE: Brazil is world’s top grower and producer; bag weighs 60 kgs, or 132 lbs
- NOTE: Through yday, arabica futures in N.Y. surged 73% this year after 1Q drought damaged crops
- Slumping Brazilian real helps cap coffee rally, she says
- Low prices in previous three yrs prompted growers to use less fertilizer, and dryness causes roots to separate from cracked soil, preventing plants from absorbing nutrients, Ganes-Chase says
- As spring begins in South Hemisphere, higher temperatures are evaporating moisture faster
- NOTE: Crop seen getting little relief from dryness, World Weather Inc. said yday
- NOTE: Reservoir levels in southeast, where bulk of crops are grown, were 25.7% of capacity on Sept. 28, compared with 30.3% at end-Aug., according to data from power-grid operator ONS
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