US coffee drinkers in for double shot of pain from tariffs

Micheal

A worker handles coffee beans from a bucket

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

US consumers face even steeper rises in the price of coffee and chocolate as a result of US President Donald Trump’s new tariffs on the world’s largest producers.

The levies, which will hit coffee imports from Brazil, Colombia and Vietnam, are expected to push up prices in shops and cafés at a time when bean costs have already soared amid supply shortages.

The US imports the bulk of its coffee from Colombia and Brazil, the world’s largest producers of high-quality arabica coffee beans, whose goods will be subject to tariffs of 10 per cent under the new measures. Hefty 46 per cent levies on Vietnamese goods will also have an impact — the south-east Asian nation is the world’s main producer of the cheaper robusta beans typically used in instant coffee, and another big exporter to the US.

“Ultimately, the USA is the single largest importer of coffee in the world, the ultimate nation of coffee drinkers. So consumers will suffer,” said Kona Haque, head of research at commodity trader ED&F Man.

Haque said the tariffs would “immediately” push up the cost of green coffee to roasters, which would “inevitably” be passed on to consumers. “At the end of the day, chocolate and coffee are not like automotive or shipbuilding, which Trump is trying to encourage more domestic production of,” she said. “The USA simply cannot produce these products.”

Coffee companies around the world, including Starbucks, have been hit by record coffee prices owing to unfavourable weather conditions in growing regions, including Brazil.

Meanwhile, chocolate makers have been feeling the pain as cocoa prices have almost tripled in the past year on the back of extreme weather and disease hitting harvests. Higher tariffs on imports from Ivory Coast and Ecuador are expected to drive costs higher. Ivory Coast, the world’s biggest cocoa producer, has been hit with levies of 21 per cent.

Line chart of New York arabica futures price (cents per lb) showing Coffee prices have soared to record highs in recent months

Dirk Van de Put, chief executive of Mondelēz, said in February that the maker of Oreo cookies and Toblerone was navigating “unprecedented cocoa cost inflation”.

Starbucks chief executive Brian Niccol warned during an earnings call in January that “higher prices to an already pressured consumer will likely impact our segment volumes and ultimate revenue and profitability”.

Starbucks’ share price was down more than 11 per cent on Thursday.

Line chart of London ICE cocoa futures (£ per tonne) showing Chocolate makers are already suffering from sky-high cocoa prices

The US produces only a small fraction of its own coffee and cocoa, with Hawaii being the main domestic source of both.

Lucrezia Cogliati, commodities analyst at BMI said: “We believe that the recent announcement of US reciprocal tariffs will raise domestic coffee prices as the United States relies almost entirely on coffee imports to meet domestic demand, producing around 0.2 per cent of the coffee it consumes.”

She added that “as production of coffee in the US is essentially non-existent, we believe that increased tariffs will not boost domestic production but rather will translate into higher consumer prices, which could ultimately weigh on demand”.

Leave a Comment