Rainfall could affect coffee harvest in Vietnam

Oct 27th at 13:33
27-10-2017 13:33:00+07:00

Rainfall could affect coffee harvest in Vietnam

Vietnam is expected to see intermittent rainfall over the next 10 days, which together with recent crop-friendly rains may affect harvesting in the second biggest coffee producer, while Indonesia's market was quiet, traders said.

Vietnam's main coffee belt, the Central Highlands, is likely to see a mix of rain and sunny weather in the next 10 days, the National Meteorological and Hydrological Center forecast.

Recent rainfall has prevented beans from turning ripe and ready for harvest, traders said.

"Beans need about two to three weeks of sunny days to be fully grown...It looks like new beans might not be available until the second half of November," said a Ho Chi Minh City-based trader on Thursday.

The country's coffee crop starts from October and ends in September.

In Vietnam, the 5 percent black and broken grade 2 robusta was quoted at a discount of $20-$50 to the London ICE January futures contract, but low stocks and weak demand from importers kept the market dull, traders said.

"Some farmers have started harvesting, but only a few, and they mostly use drying machines...It's not so sunny yet," said Phan Hung Anh, deputy director of Anh Minh Co in Daklak, Vietnam's top coffee-growing province.

The harvest could peak by mid-November, he said.

Farmers in Daklak were offering coffee beans at 42,400-43,000 dong ($1.87-$1.89) per kg , traders said, steady from last week's offer at 42,000-43,000 dong.

In Indonesia, the grade 4 defect 80 robusta beans was being traded at a $40 premium to the January contract in the main coffee growing province of Lampung, a trader said, the same as last week.

tuoitrenews



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

MoIT initiates probe into fraudulent silk scandal

The Minister of Industry and Trade, Trần Tuấn Anh, on Thursday asked the Department of Market Watch to look into the origin of products of the Khaisilk Group - a...

VN vows to combat IUU fishing

After Viet Nam received a “yellow card” from the European Commission because of its failure to meet standards against illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU)...

Vietnam’s seafood ‘yellow carded’ by European Commission

Vietnam has been given the equivalent of a ‘yellow card’ by the European Commission for failing to take sufficient action against illegal fishing.

Huda takes gold at international beer competitions

Carlsberg Vietnam has announced that its Huda and Huda Gold brand has won three gold medals at the World Beer Awards 2017 (WBA) in the UK, the Berlin International...

VFA hikes rice export target on strong demand

The Viet Nam Food Association (VFA) has decided to raise its rice export target from 5.2 million tonnes to 5.6 million tones, following an increase in rice...

Natural rubber market struggles

The natural rubber market is anticipated to continue struggling due to plunging prices, according to the Association of Natural Rubber Producing Countries (ANRPC).

Big EU demand for small shrimps

Shrimp exports to the European Union (EU) increased constantly in August and September, making it the biggest consumer of the Vietnamese product, according to the...

PV Oil ready to roll out E5 bio-fuel nationwide

PetroVietnam Oil Corporation (PV Oil) is willing to switch from RON A92 petrol to bio-fuel E5 on nationwide from January 1, 2018, according to newswire Cafef.

LCD tax loophole found, with big losses

Local customs departments will have to tighten their inspection of LCD product codes to avoid tax losses, as electronics firms have recently been tagged with tax...

Concern over quality threatens export of Vietnamese pork

Improvements in the quality of Vietnamese pork are crucial if the country’s vision of becoming a major exporter of the meat is to be realized, experts said at a...

Commodity prices


MOST READ


Back To Top