logo
Insane amount Aussies could pay for coffee

Insane amount Aussies could pay for coffee

Perth Now3 hours ago

Coffee may need to reach $12 a cup for Australia to compete with other countries for the sacred beans.
Benchmark prices hit an all-time high in April, and industry insiders say Chinese demand for beans is squeezing prices in Australia.
'(The) Chinese have very much converted from tea to coffee,' Essential Coffee chief executive Todd Hiscock told the ABC.
'They're buying up unprecedented levels of coffee supplies, often they're taking a whole Brazilian stock load in ways that's never been seen before.' Suppliers are grappling with high coffee prices after poor harvests in the major coffee-growing regions of the world. NewsWire Credit: Supplied
Median prices per cup needed to increase to between $8 to $12, he said.
'We've got to come to the party and pay in a competitive global market,' Hiscock said.
Brazil produces more than one-third of the world's coffee beans. The country battled through a drought in 2024 that was capped off with a cold snap. Combined, this slashed the overall harvests.
As investors turn away from the volatile US, the Brazilian real has also climbed, disincentivising exports out of Brazil. The price of wholesale coffee has more than doubled in less than two years. NewsWire / Gaye Gerard Credit: News Corp Australia
Vietnam is the second-largest coffee producer. The El Nino weather pattern plunged Vietnam's coffee-growing regions into drought for the past two years, damaging the plants so badly that many will not fully recover for another two years.
These international pressures, plus general inflation, are slicing margins at Australian cafes.
A large player in the Australian coffee industry, Essential Coffee's wage bill has risen 9 per cent in two years, combined with a 29 per cent increase in rent and a 6 per cent rise in insurance.
Mr Hiscock told the ABC the price of wholesale coffee had risen 119 per cent since November 2023.
'It's hard because people are very sensitive to their beloved coffee and when you move the price up, you find not just a lot of negative reaction, you find some very terse expletives,' he said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israel boards Greta's boat; LA riots threaten super; ScoMo honoured
Israel boards Greta's boat; LA riots threaten super; ScoMo honoured

AU Financial Review

time34 minutes ago

  • AU Financial Review

Israel boards Greta's boat; LA riots threaten super; ScoMo honoured

Want to get this in your inbox at lunchtime every weekday? Financial Review subscribers can sign up for The Brief newsletter here. Plus start your day with our Before the Bell newsletter and read a full wrap of the day's news in Market Wrap. In today's news, Israeli forces board a boat carrying activist Greta Thunberg, LA's riots worsen 'the biggest risk' facing Australian super funds, and Scott Morrison gets the nation's top award.

Public equities advocate Perpetual hops into bed with Swiss private equity
Public equities advocate Perpetual hops into bed with Swiss private equity

AU Financial Review

time41 minutes ago

  • AU Financial Review

Public equities advocate Perpetual hops into bed with Swiss private equity

Here's a sentence we never expected to write: funds management royalty Perpetual's Australian equities unit – the one that has kept chairmen and chief executives honest for decades – is getting into bed with private equity. In a sign of the times, the team under Vince Pezzullo, Perpetual's head of equities, has cut a deal with Swiss private equity firm Partners Group to explore public-private funds or other types of investment vehicles that would combine public and private equity.

The US needs Australian beef for hamburgers, Littleproud says
The US needs Australian beef for hamburgers, Littleproud says

West Australian

timean hour ago

  • West Australian

The US needs Australian beef for hamburgers, Littleproud says

Anthony Albanese should play hardball with the US on beef as tariff talks grind on, Nationals leader David Littleproud says. American beef imports have emerged as a key negotiating item in the Albanese government's efforts to secure a tariff carve out. The Trump administration has been pushing for Australia to loosen import rules to include beef from cattle originating in Canada and Mexico but slaughtered in the US. The Prime Minister has confirmed biosecurity officials were reviewing the request but vowed his government would not 'compromise' Australia's strict bio laws. But the prospect of changing laws has sparked unease among cattle farmers worried about keeping bovine diseases well away from the country's shores. With beef imports seemingly key to securing a US tariff exemption, Mr Littleproud on Monday said there needed to be some 'perspective'. 'The United States does need Australia and other countries to import beef to be able to put on their hamburgers,' he told Sky News. 'They don't have the production capacity to be able to produce the type of beef that goes on their hamburgers. 'So this is a tax on themselves that they put on Australian beef.' Despite being subject to the blanket 10 per cent tariffs on foreign imports, Australian beef into the US has risen by 32 per cent this year, according to Meat and Livestock Australia. Meanwhile, the cost of domestically produced beef within the US has been climbing, as cattle farmers struggle with drought. Mr Littleproud said the Nationals were not against importing American beef provided that it was from cattle 'born in the United States and bred all the way through to their slaughter in the United States'. But beef from cattle originating in third countries was a risk because 'we don't have the traceability that we have over the US production system'. 'And that's why Anthony Albanese needed to rule out straight away that he would not open that up to those cattle that were born in Canada, Mexico, or anywhere else in the Americas, because that poses a significant risk unless we can trace those cattle,' Mr Littleproud said. Mr Albanese has been clear in saying he would 'never loosen any rules regarding our biosecurity'. But he has also said that if a deal can be struck 'in a way that protects our biosecurity, of course we don't just say no'. Mr Littleproud acknowledged Mr Albanese's words but said 'when you see reports from departments saying this is what's on the table in terms of negotiations – where there's smoke, there's fire'. In addition to the baseline 10 per cent duties on foreign goods, Australia has also been subjected to 50 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium. Only the UK has been able to secure a partial exemption from the Donald Trump's tariffs. A key UK concession was scrapping its 20 per cent imposts on American beef and raising the import quota to 13,000 metric tonnes. But with many British goods still subject to tariffs, analysts have questioned whether the deal was worth it. The US has trade surpluses with both the UK and Australia. Though, Australia also has a free-trade agreement with the US, meaning goods should be traded mostly uninhibited. The Albanese government has repeatedly criticised Mr Trump's decision to slap tariffs on Australian products as 'economic self-harm' and 'not the act of a friend'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store