Meinungen zu Kaffee (Seite 59)
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Letzter Kurs 28.04.23 ICE Futures Electronic Trading
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Werte aus der Branche Nahrungsmittel
Wertpapier | Kurs | Perf. % |
---|---|---|
78,00 | +151,61 | |
12,125 | +121,66 | |
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1,1500 | -50,00 | |
2,0100 | -60,29 | |
2,6600 | -60,88 |
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Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 44.270.686 von Sdrasdwutje am 19.03.13 12:19:29Bin heute früh wieder rein, war bestimmt ein Fehler. Aber es bildet sich ein Keil unterhalb 1,35 mit Tendenz nach oben. Wenn es nach oben ausbrechen sollte, wird es bestimmt nur kurzfristig sein. Den Finger hab ich auf jeden Fall auf dem Verkaufsknopf.
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 44.270.641 von schlumpi2 am 19.03.13 12:10:01ja, ist leider so gelaufen wie gefürchtet, Schluskurs unter 138 war tödlich
hatte am Montag noch gedacht, vielleicht ein false break oder so, aber so sah es dann gestern Nachmittag nicht mehr aus, bin bei 135,60 raus
wenn ich irgend welche Bodentendenzen sehr gehe ich wieder rein, aber vorher nicht
hatte am Montag noch gedacht, vielleicht ein false break oder so, aber so sah es dann gestern Nachmittag nicht mehr aus, bin bei 135,60 raus
wenn ich irgend welche Bodentendenzen sehr gehe ich wieder rein, aber vorher nicht
Das sieht nicht nach einer Bodenbildung aus, eher nach einem Luftholen bevor es noch ein Stück runter geht.
Wie kommt das? Ich habe in meinem Chart in der letzten Handelsminute einen Ausreißer bis ca. 1,40 als Schlusskurs. Bin ja fast vom Stuhl gefallen. Hier sehe ich aber niedrigere Preise. Hab ich irgend was verpasst?
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 44.267.216 von Sdrasdwutje am 18.03.13 16:20:18Ist wirklich deprimierend, was da bei Kaffee abläuft. Ich kann aber auch zur Zeit vieles an den Börsen nicht nachvollziehen.
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 44.264.132 von schlumpi2 am 17.03.13 21:05:10ich bin raus, so ganz kann man das nicht nachvollziehen was die die da machen, aber da braucht man sich auch keine Mühe zu geben das zu verstehen, wie schon gesagt, die haben sowieso alle ein Rad ab
ab jetzt kanns steigen
ab jetzt kanns steigen
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 44.264.132 von schlumpi2 am 17.03.13 21:05:10Richtig! Aber wenn sich bei Robusta die Angebotsseite deutlich verschlechtert, müssen Händler zwangsläufig auf Arabica ausweichen.
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 44.264.088 von Sdrasdwutje am 17.03.13 20:43:21Vietnam hin oder her. Ist es nicht so, das es sich bei dem kaffeepreis den wir hier beobachten sich ausschließlich um die Sorte Arabica handelt und nicht um Robusta? Oder liege ich falsch?
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 44.263.523 von Herr-Vorragend am 17.03.13 17:31:12morgen wirds spannenend, technisch stehts knapp an der Klippe, wäre dumm wenn man morgen ausgekegelt wird und dann gehts hoch
Antwort auf Beitrag Nr.: 44.263.391 von schlumpi2 am 17.03.13 16:49:58Top robusta grower Vietnam poised for lowest crop since '06
Last Updated: Friday, March 15, 2013 07:25:00
The coffee harvest in Vietnam, the biggest grower of robusta beans used by Nestle SA in instant drinks, may drop to an eight-year low because of drought in the main growing regions, boosting prices to the highest since 2011.
Production may plunge as much as 30 percent to 1 million tons in the 12 months starting October from 1.43 million tons this year, according to the median of eight trader and shipper estimates compiled by Bloomberg. That would be the smallest since 2005-2006, according to US Department of Agriculture data. The decline will be at least 10 percent, the survey shows.
A lower crop in Vietnam would cut supplies from Asia where exports from Indonesia, the third-largest shipper, are falling because of higher domestic consumption. Global usage of robusta has expanded as processors shifted from costlier arabica beans, brewed by Starbucks Corp., says Macquarie Group Ltd. Buyers of the Vietnamese variety are paying a larger premium as sales come to “a complete stop” on speculation prices will rise amid the drought, according to Volcafe Ltd.
“There’s a very high chance of a poor crop with this dry weather,” said Mai Ky Van, deputy director at October Coffee- Cocoa One Member Ltd. “If it doesn’t rain in the next 20 days or so, damage will be huge,” said Van, whose company is accessing water from reservoirs far from its plantations.
Futures on NYSE Liffe in London may climb 13 percent to $2,450 a ton by the end of the year, according to the median of six trader and shipper estimates in a separate survey. Robusta was last at that level in July 2011
Discount shrinks
Robusta discount to arabica slumped to 40.67 cents per pound on March 13, the lowest level in four years, and was at 41.54 cents a pound yesterday as robusta climbed 12 percent this year and arabica fell 2.9 percent on ICE Futures U.S.
A 30 percent drop in production was also forecast by Luong Van Tu, chairman of the Vietnam Coffee & Cocoa Association on March 10. Tu didn’t give a specific output estimate.
Drought in the central region covering five coffee-growing provinces, including top producer Dak Lak, will continue and may become more severe, the National Center for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting said March 5. Water levels at rivers in the region will “fall slowly” in the 10 days through March 20, the center said March 11. Trees usually flower starting January and most would have formed fruits by now, growers say.
“My next crop will decline for sure,” said Dang Xuan Tap, 49, a Dak Lak farmer who started growing coffee in the 1990s. “I’m worried that the drought this year could be as bad as the one in 2004,” he said. The harvest that year was 870,000 tons, according to USDA data.
Sales halt
Tap, who has 1 hectare of plantations, expects to harvest 2 tons to 3 tons of beans from the next crop, compared with 4 tons this year. He’s held back half the output since the Tet New Year holiday which ended about a month ago as prices advanced.
In Dak Lak province, which supplies about a third of Vietnam’s crop, the beans cost 45,400 dong ($2.17) a kilogram (2.2 pounds) yesterday, up 19 percent this year, data from the Daklak Trade & Tourism Center show. Prices rose to 45,500 dong on March 11, the highest since September 2011.
Beans from the country for shipment in April and May were at a premium of $50 a ton to the futures price on NYSE Liffe, said Volcafe, the coffee unit of commodities trader ED&F Man Holdings Ltd. That was double the $25 premium a week earlier, the Winterthur, Switzerland-based trader said in a report e- mailed on March 8.
Fewer shipments
Farmers may have sold 57 percent of the current crop, less than 60 percent a year earlier, as they sought higher prices because of the drought and the decline in shipments from Indonesia, according to a Bloomberg survey published March 7. Shipments fell 54 percent to 100,380 tons in February from a month ago, Vietnam’s General Customs Department said March 13.
Exports from Indonesia may drop to a two-year low as increasing domestic consumption erodes supplies from a record harvest, a survey showed Feb. 28. Shipments will total 450,000 tons in the 12 months starting April 1. That’s 7.4 percent less than sales of 486,000 tons this year, USDA data.
Global robusta usage rose 11 percent in the 12 months to September as arabica consumption fell 6.2 percent, Macquarie said in January. Instant-coffee demand will grow 6.5 percent from 2012 to 2017, more than the 6 percent forecast for the roast and ground market, J. Ross Colbert, global strategist of beverages at Rabobank International, said on March 5.
Bloomberg
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Awake at the wheel
Top robusta grower Vietnam poised for lowest crop since '06
US vets want to make amends in Vietnam
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Bank worker allegedly steals over $170,000 from ATMs in Vietnam
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Last Updated: Friday, March 15, 2013 07:25:00
The coffee harvest in Vietnam, the biggest grower of robusta beans used by Nestle SA in instant drinks, may drop to an eight-year low because of drought in the main growing regions, boosting prices to the highest since 2011.
Production may plunge as much as 30 percent to 1 million tons in the 12 months starting October from 1.43 million tons this year, according to the median of eight trader and shipper estimates compiled by Bloomberg. That would be the smallest since 2005-2006, according to US Department of Agriculture data. The decline will be at least 10 percent, the survey shows.
A lower crop in Vietnam would cut supplies from Asia where exports from Indonesia, the third-largest shipper, are falling because of higher domestic consumption. Global usage of robusta has expanded as processors shifted from costlier arabica beans, brewed by Starbucks Corp., says Macquarie Group Ltd. Buyers of the Vietnamese variety are paying a larger premium as sales come to “a complete stop” on speculation prices will rise amid the drought, according to Volcafe Ltd.
“There’s a very high chance of a poor crop with this dry weather,” said Mai Ky Van, deputy director at October Coffee- Cocoa One Member Ltd. “If it doesn’t rain in the next 20 days or so, damage will be huge,” said Van, whose company is accessing water from reservoirs far from its plantations.
Futures on NYSE Liffe in London may climb 13 percent to $2,450 a ton by the end of the year, according to the median of six trader and shipper estimates in a separate survey. Robusta was last at that level in July 2011
Discount shrinks
Robusta discount to arabica slumped to 40.67 cents per pound on March 13, the lowest level in four years, and was at 41.54 cents a pound yesterday as robusta climbed 12 percent this year and arabica fell 2.9 percent on ICE Futures U.S.
A 30 percent drop in production was also forecast by Luong Van Tu, chairman of the Vietnam Coffee & Cocoa Association on March 10. Tu didn’t give a specific output estimate.
Drought in the central region covering five coffee-growing provinces, including top producer Dak Lak, will continue and may become more severe, the National Center for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting said March 5. Water levels at rivers in the region will “fall slowly” in the 10 days through March 20, the center said March 11. Trees usually flower starting January and most would have formed fruits by now, growers say.
“My next crop will decline for sure,” said Dang Xuan Tap, 49, a Dak Lak farmer who started growing coffee in the 1990s. “I’m worried that the drought this year could be as bad as the one in 2004,” he said. The harvest that year was 870,000 tons, according to USDA data.
Sales halt
Tap, who has 1 hectare of plantations, expects to harvest 2 tons to 3 tons of beans from the next crop, compared with 4 tons this year. He’s held back half the output since the Tet New Year holiday which ended about a month ago as prices advanced.
In Dak Lak province, which supplies about a third of Vietnam’s crop, the beans cost 45,400 dong ($2.17) a kilogram (2.2 pounds) yesterday, up 19 percent this year, data from the Daklak Trade & Tourism Center show. Prices rose to 45,500 dong on March 11, the highest since September 2011.
Beans from the country for shipment in April and May were at a premium of $50 a ton to the futures price on NYSE Liffe, said Volcafe, the coffee unit of commodities trader ED&F Man Holdings Ltd. That was double the $25 premium a week earlier, the Winterthur, Switzerland-based trader said in a report e- mailed on March 8.
Fewer shipments
Farmers may have sold 57 percent of the current crop, less than 60 percent a year earlier, as they sought higher prices because of the drought and the decline in shipments from Indonesia, according to a Bloomberg survey published March 7. Shipments fell 54 percent to 100,380 tons in February from a month ago, Vietnam’s General Customs Department said March 13.
Exports from Indonesia may drop to a two-year low as increasing domestic consumption erodes supplies from a record harvest, a survey showed Feb. 28. Shipments will total 450,000 tons in the 12 months starting April 1. That’s 7.4 percent less than sales of 486,000 tons this year, USDA data.
Global robusta usage rose 11 percent in the 12 months to September as arabica consumption fell 6.2 percent, Macquarie said in January. Instant-coffee demand will grow 6.5 percent from 2012 to 2017, more than the 6 percent forecast for the roast and ground market, J. Ross Colbert, global strategist of beverages at Rabobank International, said on March 5.
Bloomberg
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Story from Thanh Nien News
Published:
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Latest news
Awake at the wheel
Top robusta grower Vietnam poised for lowest crop since '06
US vets want to make amends in Vietnam
Beef up rhino horn regulations or face sanctions, Vietnam told
Bank worker allegedly steals over $170,000 from ATMs in Vietnam
Home | Contact | About us | Vietnamese Edition |
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