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sábado, 4 de janeiro de 2014

Produção de café na Colômbia aumenta 41% em 2013

A produção de café na Colômbia aumentou 41% em 2013, ano em que as exportações sofreram um crescimento superior a um terço (35%) relativamente a 2012, informou, esta sexta-feira, a Federação Nacional do setor.

Segundo um relatório da Federação Nacional de produtores de café, ao longo de 2013, foram produzidos 10,8 milhões de sacos de 60 quilogramas, contra 7,7 milhões contabilizados em 2012, o que traduz uma subida de 41%.

O aumento da produção de café esteve em `sintonia` com as exportações totais, com a venda ao exterior de 9,6 milhões de sacos de café, reflexo de uma subida de 35% face a 2012. "A recuperação da produtividade é, sem dúvida, o mais importante, pois contribui para `resgatar` a competitividade", assinalou o gerente geral da FNC, Luis Genaro Muñoz, em declarações citadas pela agência noticiosa Efe.

A federação espera que a produtividade média continue a aumentar em 2014, "o que ajudará a compensar parcialmente o panorama incerto dos preços internacionais". "A Colômbia recuperou os seus níveis históricos de produtividade, bem como o terceiro lugar entre os países produtores de café no mundo, depois do Brasil e Vietnam", assinalou a FNC.


Produção da Índia cai para 5,183 milhões de sacas, após as fortes chuvas

  O Conselho de Café da Índia reduziu sua estimativa de produção para a atual temporada em 1,27% para 5,183 milhões de sacas devido ao efeito da monção . A projeção é menor do que a produção da última temporada de 5,250 milhões de sacas . O conselho revisou sua estimativa para a temporada que começou em novembro, depois de avaliar os danos causados pela monção em áreas de crescimento , particularmente em Karnataka. Chuva contínua durante julho-setembro em áreas como Kodagu levou à estagnação do crescimento da cultura , além de negar a luz do sol , que é essencial para a fotossíntese. Em seu break-up para esta produção temporadas , a diretoria atrelada produção de 1,7 milhões de sacas arábica e 3,483 milhões de robusta. O conselho tinha , em sua estimativa de pós- flor, produção arábica estimada em 1,850 milhões e Robusta 3,934 milhões.
Evening markets: export news fuels revivals in soy, wheat

If agricultural commodities had a, broadly, pretty dismal debut in 2014, the second session of the new year found bulls in control.

That was in particular the case in arabica coffee, which soared 4.4% to 116.35 cents a pound in New York, for March delivery.

The rebound was seen as being fuelled by technical factors, with the beans continuing to defy broker expectations of a drop below 100 cents a pound.

Indeed, the March contract managed to regain a series of moving averages, including the 20-day, 75-day and 10-day lines - and the 100-day which it ended above for only the third time since October 2012.

It is interesting that hedge funds have been taking a less downbeat view than many brokers, cutting their net short position in New York arabica coffee futures and options by more than 12,500 lots in the fortnight before Christmas, to the lowest in seven months.

Cocoa reheated

Where investors and analysts were in agreement was on cocoa, which closed up 2.3% at £1,717 a tonne in London for May delivery, and by 2.4% to $2.699 a tonne in New York for March.

Although deliveries by producers to Ivory Coast ports are up 40% year on year to 904,000 tonnes, exporters believe, the trend is expected to prove temporary, with the impact of weather setbacks earlier in the season seen wreaking a hangover.

Elsewhere among soft commodities, robusta coffee for March bounced 1.9% to $1,644 a tonne in London, helped by an estimate by India's state-run Coffee Board that the country's overall coffee output (largely robusta) will fall 10.2% to 311,500 tonnes in 2013-14.

Huge Egyptian order

Grain and oilseed markets witnessed recoveries too, most notably in wheat, which having closed below $6 a bushel in Chicago in the last session for 19 months, bounced 1.5% this time to end at $6.05 ¾ a bushel, for March delivery.

The recovery was fuelled by a huge Egyptian order, of 535,000 tonnes, which came hours after Algeria purchased 500,000-550,000 tonnes, spurring ideas that prices are low enough to spark demand.

That has been a big issue for US wheat markets - and weekly US export sales data showed why, coming in at 256,500 tonnes, below broker forecasts of a figure of 350,000-550,000 tonnes.

"Net sales of 248,500 tonnes for delivery during the 2013-14 marketing year were down 58% from the previous week and 46% from the prior four-week average," the US Department of Agriculture said.

'Widespread winterkill damage'

In fact, details of the Egyptian tender showed that US hard red winter wheat is well price competitive – excluding freight – being offered as low as $273.14 a tonne by Louis Dreyfus.

While some French grain was offered at $296.90 a tonne, Romanian, Russian and Ukrainian wheat cost $300 a tonne or more, but won patronage on grounds of cheaper shipping costs to Egypt.

Wheat prices also gained support from ideas that the US wheat crop may be suffering after all from the country's cold snap.

"Very cold temperatures early next week will likely result in some widespread winterkill damage in northern Kansas and Nebraska," WxRisk.com said.

"Some winterkill damage will be likely there on 15-20% of the Plains wheat belt."

Chinese cancellations

Wheat's strength helped corn too, which also overcame some below-expectation weekly US export sales data.

"Net sales of 154,500 tonnes for 2013-14 were down 90% from the previous week and 80% from the prior four-week average," the USDA said.

This included a decrease of 116,000 tonnes booked for China, which has rejected several US corn cargoes on grounds of containing a GM variety unapproved by Beijing.

Indeed, this was the biggest weekly cancellation by China of US corn since October 2012.

Informa downgrades

As a further setback, US ethanol production fell last week by 13,000 barrels a day to 913,000 barrels a day.

"The weekly ethanol production number was down slightly," Darrell Holaday at Country Futures said.

"But so were ethanol stocks," down 78,000 barrels at 15.58m barrels, "so nothing big in those numbers."

And as an extra fillip, Informa Economics lowered its estimate for US corn production last year by 61m bushels to 14.162bn bushels (despite raising its yield idea by 0.4 bushels per acre to 161.6 bushels per acre).

Informa, citing lower use of nutrients by farmers in these times of lower crop prices, also cut by 2.75m tonnes, to 67.4m tonnes, its forecast for Brazilian corn output in 2013-14 - well below the USDA's 70.0m-tonne figure.

Corn for March closed up 0.7% at $4.23 ½ a bushel in Chicago, recovering from a contract low of $4.18 ½ a bushel set earlier.

'Vulnerable to additional liquidation'

Soybeans for March also recovered, after spending much of the day in negative territory, to post a gain of 0.1% to finish at $12.71 ¼ a bushel.

Informa revisions were mixed, with a 31m-bushel upgrade to the estimate for last year's US crop, to 3.329bn bushels, but a downgrade of 2m tonnes to 57.5m tonnes in the forecast for the Argentine harvest, thanks to lower planting hopes.

And as a real downer, there has been plenty of comment about the oilseed's deteriorating technical in Chicago.

"Chart-wise, soybeans remain vulnerable to additional liquidation after having failed to hold several key support levels in yesterday's trade," Benson Quinn Commodities said.

Brazilian harvest reports

Chicago-based broker Allendale said: "Technical damage to the soybean and wheat charts yesterday may have a longer lasting effect unless we can quickly stop the freefall.

"The March soybean contract closed below the key 100- and 200-day moving averages."

Furthermore, the soybean harvest has started in Brazil, "bringing with it concern that China will begin to shift their interest to South American soybeans and possibly cancel purchases of U.S. soybean shipments", US Commodities said.

At RJ O'Brien, Richard Feltes flagged "excellent yield" reports, of 47.8 bushels per acre, from the early harvest in the key Brazilian state of Mato Grosso.

Bumper export sales

However, strong weekly US export sales helped quell concerns.

Weekly US export sales were strong, at 943,400 tonnes of old crop, "up 31% from the previous week and 27% from the prior four-week average", the USDA said, besides exceeding market expectations of a figure of, at best, 800,000 tonnes.

That brought the total US sales and shipments so far in 2013-14 to 40.5m tonnes, or 1.49bn bushels.

"That number is now above 1.475bn bushels the USDA is currently projecting for the entire crop year," Country Futures Darrell Holaday said.

And of 1.53m tonnes in actual exports, 716,600 tonnes headed for China, reducing the volume up for potential cancellation - unless there are GM concerns about US soybeans too, of course…

Arabica Coffee Surges 4.4%; Cold Weather Boosts Orange Juice

  NEW YORK - Arabica-coffee futures surged 4.4% Friday as index-tracking funds and other investors
added to bets that prices would rise.
  Money managers bought coffee futures after prices fell to near-three-week lows this week and ahead
of annual index-fund reweighting, which begins next week, traders said.
  Funds that track indexes "should be coming into the market (next week) and buying up about 11,000
lots over five days" as they rebalance their positions to align with changes to the indexes, said
Beto Taguchi, a senior trader at Ally Brazilian Coffee Merchants. But Mr. Taguchi said selling from
producing countries would likely cap the rally before it can reach $1.20/lb., a key technical and
psychological level.
  "The funds have to increase their position in coffee" as they rebalance, said Hernando de la
Roche, senior vice president at INTL FCStone in Miami.
  Currency moves added to coffee's gains, Mr. de la Roche said, as the Brazilian real was gaining
strength, "so the selling from Brazil is being discouraged right now."
  A stronger real discourages exports of coffee from the No. 1 grower because producers receive less
of the Brazilian currency for their crops sold abroad in U.S. dollars. The real weakened to
four-month low of 2.4082 reais against the dollar in intraday trade Thursday but then strengthened
Friday, recently trading at 2.3768 reais per dollar, according to CQG.
  Arabica coffee for March delivery on the ICE Futures U.S. exchange ended 4.95 cents higher at
$1.1635 a pound Friday, a one-week high.
  But traders aren't confident that the rally will last, as the market is still dealing with a glut
of supply.
  Back-to-back bumper crops from Brazil and a recovery in production from neighboring Colombia, the
world's No. 2 arabica grower, helped push prices to more than seven-year lows last year. In
addition, global output of all coffee rose 7.8% in the season ended Sept. 30 from the previous
harvest, according to the International Coffee Organization.
  "The market always comes back to fundamentals, and I think it will at some point," Mr. Taguchi
said, citing $1 to $1.05 a pound as a potential target for the near term.
  Orange-juice futures also rose Friday, touching a one-week high in intraday trade, as the National
Weather Service forecast that temperatures in parts of No. 1 orange-growing state Florida could drop
toward freezing on Monday and Tuesday nights.
 But industry experts say temperatures would have to fall below 28 degrees for about four hours
before any damage would be done, a scenario that looks unlikely, according to forecasts.
Orange juice for March delivery on ICE settled 1.3% higher at $1.3975 a pound.
  A freeze that damages output this year could have an exaggerated impact on supplies, because the
U.S. Department of Agriculture is already predicting the smallest Florida orange crop in 24 years.
  In other markets, cocoa for March delivery ended 2.4% higher at $2,699 a ton, nearly reversing the
previous session's steep losses, and cotton for delivery in March settled at a one-week low of 82.94
cents a pound, down 1.3% on the day. Raw sugar for delivery in March closed down 1.3% at 16.08 cents
a pound, the lowest settlement since Dec. 18.