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For
much of the last decade, coffee prices have remained under the costs of
production. When this happens, there is naturally little or no incentive
to produce coffee. This has recently resulted in many coffee trees being
less cared for or simply uprooted to open acreage for other agricultural
commodities. And even worse, coffee producers have gone into extreme
financial difficulties or even bankruptcy. There are many examples of
these eventualities in the coffee producing areas of Africa and Latin
America.
Is
this the time to invest in coffee? Let’s examine below.
Technical
Indicators
One
key technical indicator is the Commitment of Traders Report (COT) for
coffee, shown below in the graph. The COT Report graph is derived from
position numbers of three key trader groups provided by the Commodities
Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). The CFTC classifies the three types
of traders as follows.
-
Commercials
- Producers and end users of the commodity or futures market they
participate in are referred to as commercials. This group is the
reason the commodity and futures markets exist, to allow
"commercials" an opportunity to defer or hedge the risk of
doing business. The commercials are shown in blue in the graph. The
commercials represent the smart money group that will often get
aggressively net long or short prior to major trends.
-
Large
Speculators - Defined as those traders who hold a specified
number of contracts or greater in a given market, but are not
commercial traders. The CFTC sets the minimum number of contracts
that can be held before the speculator is required to report that
position. Any speculator participating in a market that is required
to report to the CFTC is known as a non-commercial or large trader.
The large speculators are shown in green in the graph.
This group follows trends and usually mimics the market
price movement.

COT Report Graph (www.freecotcharts.com)
As
can be seen from the COT Report graph, the commercials net position has
grown in the last few months to a net long position that is the largest
in the last 9 months. This is an extremely bullish indicator for the
next few months.
It
can be seen in the COT Report graph that for other times when the
commercials went to a relatively high value of net long position, the
peak of their position holding coincided with the low in the prices for
the immediate time period but that then proceeded to rally to higher
prices. For examples - see the commercials net long position peak around
mid November 2003 followed by rising prices for the next several months
or see the commercials net long position peak round mid March 2003
followed by rising prices for the next couple months.
Thus
this powerful technical indicator is now appearing to indicate a
strongly bullish scenario for coffee prices in the upcoming few months.
Let’s look at some additional technical indicators for any confirming
indications.
Another
technical indicator is the coffee seasonal chart. A multiyear
seasonality chart depicts the relative strength of coffee prices
throughout the year, month by month. Many technical analysts trade
around these historic seasonality behaviors. The relative seasonal
strength appears to depict a strengthening in the prices from a relative
factor of currently, in the mid to late August timeframe, of very low
relatively to relatively high by the end of the year. This appears to
indicate a relatively high strength and statistical historical
probabilty of rising prices from now through the end of the year.
This
seasonality indicator coupled with the above COT Report indicator is
currently providing confirmation for higher coffee prices in the months
to come. Let’s look at two more technical indicators for added
confirmation – moving averages and Moving Average Confirmation
Divergence (MACD).
Three
moving averages most often looked at by technical analysts are shown
below in the graph below in blue, red, and green colors.

Moving Averages Graph
(www.refco.com)
The
graph shows the basic three moving averages of 4 days, 9 days, and 18
days. The 4-day average is show in blue; the 9-day average is shown in
red; the 18-day average is shown in green. Generally the indicator works
as follows: if the faster moving average is higher than the lower moving
average, prices generally move to higher levels.
Note
that the 4-day average is currently (as of 9/1/2004) at 73.06, the 9-day
average is at 73.00, and the 18-day average is at 71.73. The fastest
average is indeed higher than the middle average, which in turn is
indeed higher than the slowest average; this has just recently occurred
and it is a bullish turn of technical indicator. This further confirms a
potential upcoming rise in coffee prices in the upcoming timeframe.
And
yet another technical indicator is the Moving Average Convergence
Divergence (MACD) indicator, shown below in the graph. The MACD
histogram depicts the difference between the two moving averages in
pink. Generally the histogram indicates that when the spread is below
the zero line but starts to move upward towards the zero line, the
downtrend is losing momentum and may provide an change indicator in
pricing trend. The MACD histogram works well on the weekly graph, which
is depicted below.

MACD Graph (www.refco.com)
Demand
Considerations from Asia
A
fundamental consideration, in addition to the basic lowering supply and
increasing demand statistics mentioned above, is a growing demand from
Asia and especially from China. Witness the growth of coffee consumption
and the emergence of Starbucks and other brand café houses all over the
city island state of Singapore in recent years; if this is any
indication of the growth and interest in coffee in the region, then if
China increases its current per-capita coffee consumption from about 200
grams to the same levels as in Japan (about 2.3 kilograms), then coffee
consumption in China could be almost 3000 million kilograms compared to
about 100 or 200 million kilograms for many Western countries. This
would represent a massive increase in coffee demand resulting in much
higher prices. In general, China has already been driving the demand for
commodities and coffee would represent yet another such commodity in
increasing demand.
As
noted investment advisor Marc Faber has mentioned “In fact, I regard
the purchase of a basket of commodities as the safest way to play the
emergence of China as the world’s dominant economic power”
and most recently Marc mentioned “investors should be long a
basket of agricultural commodity futures consisting of wheat, corn,
sugar, coffee, and orange juice futures…
Summary
In
summary, coffee represents a good value buy now, based upon the
technical and fundamental indicators and considerations presented above.

© 2004 The Bonneuil Report
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Investing in Commodities and Futures
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