(Bloomberg) -- Coffee rose in New York on
speculation that colder-than-normal weather in Brazil, the
world's largest producer, may develop into a crop-damaging
frost.
Temperatures may fall to 42 degrees Fahrenheit (6 degrees
Celsius) through Aug. 1 in Brazil's major coffee-growing
regions, according to Meteorlogix LLC in Woburn, Massachusetts.
Cold air moved into the coffee belt today, and a separate high-
pressure ridge may bring lower-than-normal temperatures into
southern Brazil on Aug. 5, the private forecaster said.
Read more at Bloomberg Commodities News
speculation that colder-than-normal weather in Brazil, the
world's largest producer, may develop into a crop-damaging
frost.
Temperatures may fall to 42 degrees Fahrenheit (6 degrees
Celsius) through Aug. 1 in Brazil's major coffee-growing
regions, according to Meteorlogix LLC in Woburn, Massachusetts.
Cold air moved into the coffee belt today, and a separate high-
pressure ridge may bring lower-than-normal temperatures into
southern Brazil on Aug. 5, the private forecaster said.
Read more at Bloomberg Commodities News
No comments:
Post a Comment