Coffee futures didn’t just “drift lower” in early February—this was a positioning event. When speculative money steps away quickly, price can move faster than fundamentals, and the market’s internal signals (curve shape, stocks, grading flow) often tell you why.
What happened (price action in plain terms)
- ICE Arabica (May) broke below $3.00/lb on Feb 4 and hit 289.30¢/lb on Feb 6, the lowest since early August.
- It then partially recovered to 298.30¢/lb by Feb 13.
- ICE Robusta (May) fell to $3,668/tonne on Feb 6 (lowest since early August 2025), rebounded toward $3,800, and was last cited around $3,795 on Feb 16.
The key point: this wasn’t a straight-line crash. It was liquidation → stabilization → cautious rebound.
The headline driver: speculators pulled ~$2.7B from coffee
The piece cites a Sucafina read that speculators removed nearly $2.7 billion of long investments in coffee futures—one of the largest liquidations in the ag/soft complex early in 2026 (soybeans excluded due to market size).
That matters because when longs unwind:
- bids vanish,
- stops trigger,
- and “fair value” becomes less relevant in the short run.
Why the market broke: the “triple combination”
According to the article’s summary of the Sucafina report, the break below $3.00/lb reflected a mix of:
- coffee arriving to be graded for the exchange (deliverable supply pressure),
- a negative macro tone, and
- better-than-expected January weather in Brazil, reducing the urgency to price in scarcity.
The confirmation signal: COT positioning collapsed
The Commitment of Traders data cited shows how violent the repositioning was:
- Arabica non-commercial net long down 60.91% to 2,866 lots (week to Tue Feb 10, 2026).
- Robusta managed money net long down 65.90% to 3,556 lots (same week).
This is the “why now” behind the speed of the drop.
A subtle but important shift: backwardation eased
One of the most telling microstructure changes was reduced backwardation (less “nearby panic” in the curve), especially in New York:
- Early month differentials (1st–2nd–3rd positions) were −1,820 and −2,475 points.
- By Feb 13, they had narrowed by 175 and 570 points, respectively.
When backwardation compresses, the market is often signaling: near-term tightness is still real, but less urgent than it was.
Fundamental backdrop: Vietnam recovery + Brazil crop debate
Two fundamental threads were highlighted:
Vietnam exports recovering
The piece notes Vietnam’s exports up 17.5% to 26.33 million bags in calendar 2025, and up 38.8% to 3.3 million bags “last month.”
Brazil 2026/27 becomes the “balance-restoration” narrative
- Conab’s official estimate cited: 66.2m bags total (Arabica 44.09m, Robusta 22.09m) and +17.1% vs 2025/26.
- The article also notes a range of private estimates and emphasizes weather sensitivity into March–April for final crop development.
So… is the mood changing?
The article’s framing is balanced: expectations for a larger Brazilian crop improved, but availability is still described as limited, and low global stocks keep the market headline-sensitive.
What to watch next (my “coffee tape” checklist)
If you’re trying to read whether this was a temporary flush or a true trend change, watch:
- Curve structure: does backwardation keep easing, or does it snap back on any supply scare?
- Exchange flow: do grading/certified stock dynamics keep pressure on nearby contracts?
- Spec length rebuild: do funds cautiously re-enter (supporting a grind higher) or stay sidelined (keeping rallies capped)?
- Brazil weather into Mar–Apr: rainfall distribution matters more than “rain exists.”
- Vietnam shipment pace: continued recovery can reduce fear-premium in Robusta.
