Skip to content

Agriculture

Coffee

Coffee prices are a useful signal for beverage chains, branded packaged goods, and agricultural volatility.

Input inflation can challenge pricing architecture, store margins, and contract timing across consumer-facing businesses.

Benchmark
Coffee in US cents per pound.
Use Cases
3
Tracked In
3 industries

Quick Read

Daily market pricing.
Data source: Alpha Vantage
Brazil and Vietnam output
frost risk
inventory drawdowns
retail pricing elasticity

Price History

How Coffee has been moving

Use the chart to frame cycle strength, input-cost pressure, and how the signal may feed into sector margins.

Coffee

Alpha Vantage granularity
Change % n/a
Min n/aMax n/a
Loading market chart...

Why this commodity matters

Coffee matters because it can combine crop volatility with strong consumer brand exposure. Companies often have pricing power, but they still need timing discipline when green-coffee costs move violently.

What this raw material is useful for

Coffee roasters and branded beverage businesses
Confectionery and flavor exposure
Reading weather-led agricultural disruption

Sectors that care the most

Latest
n/a
Latest Change
n/a
1Y Change
n/a
5Y Change
n/a
All-Time High
n/a
All-Time Low
n/a

Demand Drivers

Global beverage consumption
Cafe traffic and branded retail demand
Inventory coverage by roasters
Premiumization and out-of-home consumption

Supply Drivers

Brazil and Vietnam crop conditions
Frost, drought, and weather volatility
Currency moves in key producing countries
Inventory drawdowns and logistics

Benchmark & Coverage

Benchmark: Coffee in US cents per pound.

Series cadence: Daily market pricing.

Stored points: Not available

Date span: n/a

Watchpoint 1
Brazil and Vietnam output
Watchpoint 2
frost risk
Watchpoint 3
inventory drawdowns
Watchpoint 4
retail pricing elasticity

Industry Connections

Where this material actually shows up

Basic Materials

Agricultural Inputs

Consumer Defensive

Confectioners

Consumer Defensive

Farm Products