Coffee prices at the weekly Nairobi auction have dropped by nine
per cent, marking the first decline since the beginning of the year
after a series of higher prices.
A market report by the
Nairobi Coffee Exchange (NCE) indicates a 50 kilogramme bag of coffee
was sold at Sh26,058 in this week’s trading, down from Sh28,684 in the
previous sale. Coffee prices have been on an upward trajectory since the
first sale of 2017 following an increase in high quality beans from
farmers.
“The prices have dropped but they are within a
good range,” said NCE chief executive Daniel Mbithi, who could not
immediately give the cause for the decline. The coffee that is trading
at the auction currently is coming in from the main crop season in
central Kenya.
The harvesting season starts every October with supplies running all the way to March.
Last
year the crop was hit by drought that affected most parts of the
country leading to postponement of auctions at some point. Coffee prices
dropped 13 per cent in four months to January as low international
prices and delays in getting the commodity to the market at the end of
last year.
Data from the NCE indicates earnings
dropped from Sh5.5 billion ($55 million) in October last year to Sh4.7
billion ($47 million) in the period under review.
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