Brazilian farmers can switch from coffee beans to other crops
cheaper, less expensive components for a blend — I never thought it was the right strategy in the first place — but now it’s a strategy that just simply doesn’t work anymore,” said Michael Kapos, vice president for sales and marketing at Downeast Coffee Roasters, a family-owned retailer and wholesaler based in Rhode Island. “There’s nothing left to do than for coffee shops to raise their prices.” His company rolled out a 5% increase earlier this year.
It’s not just weather, though, that’s driving up prices. Emerging demand in markets like China promises to keep supplies tight. There’s also a growing recognition that coffee traders and roasters have long been underpaying farmers, a trend some buyers are trying to reverse to make the industry more sustainable. Higher profits incentivize producers to keep planting coffee instead of other crops and allow them to reinvest in making their trees more resilient to disease and climate risks. If coffee prices don’t go up for growers, there won’t be any reason for them to maintain long-term production.
That’s what happened in the cocoa market, which jumped to never-before-seen prices this spring as production plummeted following decades of underinvestment. Some cash-strapped commodities traders were even forced to exit their coffee positions amid pressure from rallying cocoa futures. Exacerbating everything is the fact that roasters importing coffee into Europe will soon have to prove the beans weren’t grown on recently deforested land. Few countries are fully prepared to comply with the European Union Deforestation Regulation requirements, meaning supplies will be tight.
“Buyers are looking earlier than they usually would and in more quantities because they need to get that coffee to Europe now before EUDR kicks in. That’s making everything worse,” said Tomas Araujo, trading associate at StoneX.
For decades, consumers around the globe had long enjoyed cheap brews at the expense of growers, from 99-cent drip coffees at US rest stops to €1 bar-side espressos in Paris. Many of those deals have been slowly evaporating, due to a combination of the higher bean prices, rising labor costs and supply chain disruptions that flared up at the height of the pandemic.
In general, once consumers get used to higher prices, companies are reticent to backtrack. At Dimbulah Coffee in Singapore, a flat white today costs about S$5.90 ($4.38). At Where’s Fred’s near St. Paul’s Cathedral in London, a cold brew is £3.60 after a 30 to 40 pence increase earlier this year, putting it about on par pricewise with the draught beer it also sells.
At a Blue Bottle Coffee cafe near New York’s Central Park, a 16-ounce sweet latte is $8.25 — or $9.25 if you want almond milk. Owner Nestle SA has recently implemented some price increases but not across the entire menu, a spokesperson said. “We try our best not to pass these costs on to the guests. We make changes where necessary to ensure we can continue sourcing and buying the best quality ingredients,” the company said.
When it comes to price hikes, “everybody has a limit,” said Brett House, a professor of economics at Columbia Business School. At today’s high prices, shoppers might start to trade their fancier steamed milk espresso drinks for drip coffees to bring the price point down closer to $3 a pop. “I’m still getting the treat but within the same store, I’m downgrading to a cheaper good,” he said.
Some coffee companies that secured beans in advance of the latest run-up have been able to avoid announcing more increases. For instance, Starbucks, the world’s biggest coffeehouse chain, generally locks in prices for green coffee nine to 18 months in advance, meaning it can usually weather any price volatility for a while. Some smaller shops don’t have as much flexibility.
“I’ve never been as glued to the commodity price index on coffee as I’ve been in the last few months, every day,” said Hazel de los Reyes, co-founder of Gumption Coffee in Sydney and New York. Some coffee bean traders “are even not wanting to tell me a set price because it could change any day.” The chain raised prices about 10% last year and may have to do it again in the coming months, she said.
Although consumers don’t easily give up their caffeine fix, more will opt to brew at home if coffee out gets too expensive. Grocery-store sales volumes of espresso and coffee concentrate have jumped sharply in the US, data from NIQ show, suggesting some buyers are trying to recreate their favorite coffee treats at home. As price-conscious consumers look for deals, Brazil’s coffee industry group ABIC has been warning shoppers to be wary of unknown brands of cheap beans, which sometimes contain husks, branches and waste from other plants in an effort to dupe households looking for a deal. The country’s agricultural ministry recently identified 19 fraudulent coffee brands on shelves.
Meanwhile, stores trying to appeal to more consumers are touting menu innovations like energy drinks and even coffee imitations. Gumption, for one, now carries drinks at some locations using Seattle startup Atomo Coffee’s “beanless” grounds, which are made with recycled ingredients like date seeds.
The product’s price is currently “within the range of premium coffee,” but will become a “more cost-effective solution” once Atomo increases volumes, said chief operating officer Ed Hoehn. The company launched a new Remix product last month, combining its own grounds with arabica. Other stores are consciously taking a loss on coffee at the moment, knowing a cheap brew will attract price-conscious customers who’ll also buy higher-margin items like sandwiches. Still others are pushing another hot beverage: tea.
“If you become more price-sensitive around coffee, maybe your second cup during the day, you’ve optioned for something else,” said Andrew Stone, the chief brand and culture officer at coffee chain Bluestone Lane, which operates several dozen locations from Boston to Los Angeles. “To have two cold brews in a day might be too expensive.”
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