Anticipated Rains in Brazil Intensify Coffee Market Headwinds

The coffee market faced significant selling pressure in late January 2026, driven largely by expectations of substantial precipitation in Brazil’s primary coffee-producing region. March arabica futures declined sharply, sinking to their lowest point in 5.5 months, while robusta varieties retreated to 3.5-week lows. The anticipated rains across Minas Gerais set off a cascade of bearish sentiment that overshadowed the commodity’s technical support levels, as traders repriced risk around the world’s largest arabica supply base.

Brazil’s Rain Forecast Reshapes Supply Expectations

The primary headwind came from meteorological forecasts predicting steady rains throughout Minas Gerais over the following week. This weather pattern fundamentally altered the supply outlook for global coffee markets. Earlier in December 2025, Conab—Brazil’s official crop forecasting agency—had already elevated its 2025 production estimate by 2.4%, projecting total output at 56.54 million bags, up from the September forecast of 55.20 million bags. The addition of anticipated rains into this abundant supply picture created a bearish convergence: ample production plus favorable growing conditions suggested continued pressure on prices from oversupply dynamics.

The rainfall pattern in Minas Gerais had been below historical norms earlier in January, with only 33.9 mm recorded during the week ended January 16—just 53% of the typical average. However, meteorologists signaled that this deficit would be corrected by the forecasted steady rains, potentially creating optimal growing conditions that could further bolster yield expectations.

Vietnam’s Surge in Production Compounds Robusta Weakness

Beyond Brazil, robusta prices faced additional pressure from Vietnam’s accelerating export activity. Vietnam’s National Statistics Office reported in early January 2026 that coffee exports had jumped 17.5% year-over-year to 1.58 million metric tons. More significantly, production projections for Vietnam’s 2025/26 crop reached 1.76 million metric tons—29.4 million bags—marking a 4-year high and representing a 6% year-over-year increase.

The Vietnam Coffee and Cocoa Association reinforced these bullish supply signals in late October 2025, indicating that output could climb 10% higher than the prior season if weather remained favorable. As the world’s dominant robusta producer, Vietnam’s surplus production directly weighed on robusta futures, creating a parallel dynamic to the arabica pressure emerging from Brazil.

Inventory Recovery Challenges Price Support Levels

While fundamental supply indicators moved bearish, storage dynamics added another layer of downward pressure. ICE-monitored arabica inventories had recovered from their 1.75-year low of 398,645 bags recorded November 20 to 461,829 bags by mid-January—a 2.5-month high. Similarly, robusta stocks bounced from their 1-year low of 4,012 lots on December 10 to 4,609 lots by late January. This inventory accumulation signaled that supply was not only abundant in production forecasts but was actively flowing into storage facilities, undermining the bullish case for price appreciation.

Mixed Signals from Export Flows and Global Production

A modest counterweight emerged from Brazil’s December export data, where total green coffee shipments fell 18.4% to 2.86 million bags. Within this decline, arabica exports contracted 10% year-over-year to 2.6 million bags, while robusta exports slumped 61%. This represented a potential tightening in available supply reaching export markets, though the impact appeared insufficient to offset the broader production and inventory trends.

Globally, the International Coffee Organization reported in November 2025 that current-year exports fell just 0.3% year-over-year to 138.658 million bags—essentially flat despite regional volatility. Looking ahead, the USDA’s Foreign Agriculture Service projected world production in 2025/26 at a record 178.848 million bags, with arabica declining 4.7% to 95.515 million bags while robusta surged 10.9% to 83.333 million bags. These forecasts underscored the structural oversupply in global markets, particularly in robusta where expanding production across multiple origins overwhelmed traditional demand patterns.

Market Trajectory: When Abundance Meets Weather

The convergence of Brazil’s anticipated rains with abundant global production set the stage for continued downward price momentum. Ending stocks for 2025/26 were projected to fall 5.4% to 20.148 million bags from 21.307 million bags in 2024/25—a modest reduction that left ample buffers against supply disruption. Unless unexpected weather events disrupted harvests across major producing regions, or demand accelerated materially, the fundamental backdrop for coffee remained weighted toward weakness. The market’s sensitivity to rains in Brazil thus reflected not just weather risk, but the thin margin between supply and demand equilibrium in a world overflowing with coffee.

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