Vietnam's domestic coffee prices rebound; Indonesian premium expands

Apr 5th at 11:18
05-04-2019 11:18:39+07:00

Vietnam's domestic coffee prices rebound; Indonesian premium expands

Domestic coffee prices in Vietnam bounced back on Thursday, tracking a recovery in London, after hitting their lowest level in three years earlier this week, while Indonesian premium expanded from last week.

Farmers in Vietnam’s Central Highlands sold coffee at 31,600-32,500 ($1.36-$1.40) per kg on Thursday, down from a range of 32,000-33,100 dong last week. Prices fell to as low as 30,700 earlier this week.

“Prices in Vietnam are moving in tandem with London prices, which also hit a multi-year low on Tuesday,” a trader based in Ho Chi Minh City said.

May robusta coffee settled up $44, or 3.1 percent, at $1,457 per tonne on Wednesday.

Traders said low prices have discouraged farmers from selling their beans and put a break on exports.

Vietnam’s coffee exports in March fell 24 percent from a year earlier to 160,000 tonnes, government data released on Friday showed. Shipments in the first quarter fell 15.3 percent to 477,000 tonnes.

Traders in Vietnam offered 5 percent black and broken grade 2 robusta at a $75 per tonne discount to the July contract, compared with a $30-$50 discount last week.

Meanwhile, in Indonesia, premium expanded this week to compensate for the recent drop in the benchmark London prices.

Premium for the grade 4 defect 80 robusta rose to $100-$110 to the May contract on Thursday from $70-$80 a week ago, a trader in Sumatra’s Lampung province said.

“Transaction remain light in volume as supplies from an ongoing mini harvest in some areas in southern Sumatra remain limited,” the trader said.

He said trade won’t pick up significantly until next month. The main robusta harvest in Indonesia typically starts from mid-year.

Indonesia’s exports of Sumatra robusta in March totalled 6,563 tonnes, up 53 percent from a year earlier but down 19 percent from February.

tuoitrenews



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Quality control rule has 5,000 tons of fish stuck at ports

Vietnam’s seafood association has complained that a quality control circular is preventing 5,235 tons of fish from being cleared for export.

Hyundai and Kia vehicles may pose fire hazard in Vietnam

Hyundai’s Santa Fe 2019 and Kia’s Optima vehicles in circulation in Vietnam may pose fire hazard due to their petrol engine Theta II 2.4, which is suspected to be...

Malaysia initiates anti-dumping duty investigation on non-alloy steel from Viet Nam

Malaysia has announced it will initiate an anti-dumping duty investigation on the imports of cold-rolled coils of iron or non-alloy steel originating or exported...

Trade ministry explains fuel price hike

Domestic fuel prices are currently adjusted according to global market price movements, Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Do Thang Hai said, explaining why fuel...

Lexus Vietnam introduces new Lexus RC 2019

Lexus Vietnam on Monday introduced new Lexus RC 2019 – a luxury sports coupe.

Gold price tumbles, greenback flat

The domestic gold price continued falling to under VND36.5 million per tael today, April 2, while the U.S. dollar price remained stable, backed by the large supply...

Prime Minister sets emissions standards for used cars

Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc has set a new roadmap to apply emission standards for road vehicles, including imported used cars.

Petrol prices hiked in latest review

The retail prices of oil and petrol rose sharply on Tuesday following adjustments made by the ministries of finance and industry and trade.

Indonesia’s Honda Brio to be exported to Philippines, Viet Nam

Honda sole agent in Indonesia PT Honda Prospect Motor (HPM) kicked off Tuesday the production of the export-oriented All New Honda Brio cars at its factory in...

RON95 petrol supply sufficient: Ministry

Supplies of RON95, one of the two main types of petrol used in Viet Nam, were still sufficient, according to the Ministry of Industry and Trade following complaints...

Commodity prices


MOST READ


Back To Top