Coffee prices continued to move in opposite directions on Tuesday, with robusta extending gains while arabica fell for the second straight session. The market is undergoing a technical correction after becoming overbought following the recent sharp rally.
On a day when the London exchange was closed for a public holiday, arabica coffee prices in New York edged lower. The market, however, remains supported by shrinking certified ICE inventories and expectations of a smaller arabica crop in Brazil than initially forecast.
Coffee prices continued to surge on both major exchanges, driven by speculative buying amid tight inventories and global trade disruptions caused by the U.S. imposing a 50% tariff on Brazilian coffee imports. Global Coffee Price Update Coffee has now extended its two-week rally, with arabica hitting a 2.25-month high and robusta reaching its highest level […]
Coffee prices moved in opposite directions at the start of the week. Arabica extended its rally by 0.57% to reach a two-month high, while robusta turned lower, falling by 1.09%. Meanwhile, Brazil’s Agriculture Minister, Carlos Fávaro, suggested that Brazilian coffee exports could be exempt from the 50% U.S. tariff.
Coffee prices jumped sharply today, with robusta climbing by US $206/ton to US $3,933/ton, marking its highest level in two months. The rally was fueled by short-covering activity and news that Brazil’s robusta coffee exports plunged by 49% in July.
Coffee prices eased slightly today as investors took profits from long positions. Meanwhile, U.S. buyers have requested to postpone imports of Brazilian coffee due to tariff impacts.
In the latest coffee price today snapshot, coffee futures diverged sharply—Arabica surged on heightened geopolitical tensions, while Robusta pulled back modestly. The risk of a looming U.S. 50% tariff on Brazilian coffee took center stage, boosting Arabica sentiment amid speculation that exemptions are less likely.
Coffee markets turned positive on August 5, with coffee price today showing strong gains—Robusta climbed to its highest level in two weeks, supported by drought concerns in Brazil and a strengthening Brazilian real. Meanwhile, Arabica futures also rebounded modestly. Separately, Vietnam’s coffee export earnings reached a record USD 6 billion in the first seven months of 2025, up 65% year-on-year.
Coffee price today showed a mixed performance across global exchanges. Robusta surged to over $3,400/ton—its highest level in two weeks—while Arabica continued to decline, falling to 293.4 US cents/pound.
Vietnam Coffee Price Today continues to climb domestically, rising by 500–700 VND/kg to reach between 97,300 and 98,000 VND/kg. Yet paradoxically, world markets have turned lower amid uncertainty over pending U.S. duties.
