Will your latte cost you more?? $$

As we read this morning in the WSJ, Coffee future prices are at a 13yr high(article below). This is just another sign on inflation OR is it actually the normal cycle as investors move away from a sideways stock market and low rate fixed income market?

Will your latte cost you more?? Well of course it will, just like the trade a few years ago in oil brought the cost at the pump upto $5 or $6 a gallon- our now $3ish is a win compared to that. The true reason is the lack of investments that can give you a good return. The commodities are the place EVERYONE is running to now- GOLD, COPPER, OIL, NAT GAS- all the crowded trade. We are not at the .com or housing bubble level yet; but it could be in the cards.

In the meantime, stock up on your beans! !

Coffee Futures Are Near a 13-Year High

 

KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Coffee futures remain close to a 13-year high, as tight supplies and the prospect of dry weather hurting next year’s Brazilian crop have sent roasters scrambling to secure beans. 

Roasters are looking for top-quality arabica coffee beans, and supplies from Colombia—the largest producer of the beans—and Central America won’t begin hitting the market in earnest until November and December. Brazil is on pace to harvest a record crop this year, though global demand is also strengthening. 

Getty ImagesSupplies from Colombia won’t hit the market until November. Here, bean pickers in Colombia in January.

December coffee futures reached a 13-year high of $1.8865 a pound last Monday, as speculative investors jumped into a market that already was rising as coffee roasters fretted over inadequate supplies. Prices then dived the next day as investors questioned the steep gains and as Brazil’s possibly record-setting crop eased supply fears. 

Since then, the market has gradually clawed its way back. On Friday, coffee for nearby September delivery on ICE Futures U.S. gained 4.2% to $1.7705 a pound. 

Rallying prices have forced U.S. roasters J.M. Smucker Co., maker of Folgers coffee, and Kraft Foods Inc., maker of Maxwell House, to raise prices by 9% to 10%. The world’s largest coffeehouse retailer, Starbucks Corp., said it will absorb increased costs of four cents a share due mainly to the high coffee values and didn’t plan to raise retail prices. 

Supply concerns are centered on Colombia’s output, which was cut 30% last year by adverse weather that also reduced Central American supplies. Coffee production in these areas is expected to rebound this year, though supplies will remain tight until later this fall. 

[COMMOD]

In the meantime, roasters continue to whittle down stockpiles. Coffee stocks in ICE-approved warehouses have shrunk 35% since the beginning of the year, and global exports were down 14% in June to 7.8 million of 132-pound bags. A year earlier, exports totaled 18.5 million, according to the London-based International Coffee Organization. 

Despite a large crop in Brazil, near-term supplies will be just enough to meet demand, keeping prices high, said Nestor Osorio, executive director of ICO. 

The success of Brazil’s second crop may hinge on whether dry weather and higher-than-normal temperatures persist, brokers said. 

Dry conditions stress coffee bushes, actually helping to boost flowering. But rains are then needed to develop the fruit after the flowering period, said Judy Ganes-Chase, coffee analyst and president of J Ganes Consulting in Katonah, N.Y. 

“If it’s just dry … then it’s not going to be an issue,” she said. “What’s bad is when you get heavy rains and then it turns dry and stays dry.” She added that the hot, dry weather is so far not a concern for Brazil’s coffee growers. 

Brazil’s main coffee-growing regions are likely to see mainly hot, dry weather until heavy rains reappear in October, Celso Oliveira, a meteorologist at private weather service Somar, said Friday. 

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Twitter Updates for 2010-08-30

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Twitter Updates for 2010-08-29

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Twitter Updates for 2010-08-28

  • checking out Biznik Peter Greene (@petergreene) at. http://biznik.com/h/m8Bs #
  • oh come on $PAR new bid from HP at $30…they are nuts #
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Twitter Updates for 2010-08-27

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Housing getting worse-Market not loving it $$

So as we go into the fall with almost 5% foreclosure and this glut of new/pre-owned homes out there we expect more pain. No buyer is in a hurry to buy anything and they definitely will not be paying up. Hearing about 1 year is a good goal to have on the market.

The only thing is that the government is going to find a way to pump the system. Below is a note from bloomberg talking about the market today:

More Bad News on Home Sales Sends Stocks Lower

By STEPHEN BERNARD

     New York (AP) — Stocks retreated again after another disappointing report on housing and weak durable goods orders brought more gloom about the economy.

     The Dow Jones industrial average fell about 16 points in midday trading Wednesday following news that sales of new homes fell last month to the lowest level on record. It was the latest indication that home sales are stagnating after the expiration of a homebuyer tax credit this spring.

     A separate report from the Commerce Department showed that durable goods orders grew only slightly last month, falling shy of expectations and disappointing investors who had been hoping that manufacturing would continue to pick up.

     Market indicators came off their lows for the day as some investors saw value in beaten-down shares. The Dow briefly fell below 10,000 for the second straight day Wednesday before climbing back above that psychological benchmark.

     Sandy Mehta, principal and chief investment officer of Value Investment Principals, said stocks are in a volatile range right now, which has been exacerbated by the seasonal summer slowdown in trading.

     “We rally, we sell off. We rally, we sell off,” Mehta said.

“It’s just the nature of the market right now.”

     The newest signs that the economic recovery is sputtering led many investors to move money into the relative safety of Treasurys, sending their yields lower. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note is now the lowest it’s been since January 2009, when the stock market was heading toward its lowest level in 12 years, and the yield on the two-year note is at a record low.

     Stocks have been hit hard in recent days because of concerns about whether the economy will fall back into recession or at least be stuck in a prolonged period of very slow growth. The Dow is heading into its fifth straight day of declines.

     New home sales fell 12.4 percent in July to an annual rate of 276,600, the Commerce Department reported. That was the slowest pace on records dating back to 1963 and worse than the pace forecast by economists polled by Thomson Reuters. A day earlier, the National Association of Realtors said sales of existing homes, a far greater proportion of the housing market, fell to a 15-year low in July.

     The Dow Jones industrial average fell 15.97, or 0.2 percent, to 10,024.48 in midday trading.

     Broader market barometers were mixed. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 3.19, or 0.3 percent, to 1,048.68, while the Nasdaq composite index rose 1.04, or 0.1 percent, to 2,124.80.

     About three stocks fell for every two that rose on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume came to 426.7 million shares.

     The fear among investors is that if the economy continues to worsen, corporate earnings will start to weaken, just as economic indicators have.

     “The worry is, if the economy looks worse, maybe companies start ratcheting down” their earnings forecasts, said Russell Croft, portfolio manager at Croft Leominster Investment Management. “It’s still a very uncertain time.”

     The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.47 percent from 2.49 percent late Tuesday. Its yield is helps set interest rates on mortgages and other consumer loans. Bond yields move lower when their prices rise.

     Despite the ultra-low borrowing rates, home sales have been weak since a home buyer tax credit expired at the end of April.

High unemployment has kept people from buying homes, and banks still reeling from the crisis in the mortgage-backed securities market have been cautious in making new loans.

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