QUOTE AND NEWS
Mondo Visione  Oct 1  Comment 
The Brazilian Securities, Commodities and Futures Exchange - BM&FBOVESPA Arabica coffee futures market set a physical delivery record of 4,557 contracts in September 2009. The volume settled through physical delivery totals 455,700 bags of 60kg or...
Wall Street Journal  May 19  Comment 
Coffee futures rose to seven-month highs, driven by speculative buying and a bullish underlying outlook.
Wall Street Journal  Apr 22  Comment 
Arabica coffee futures rallied 4.2% on speculative fund buying and concern that a nationwide truckers' strike in Colombia may disrupt already-short supplies.
Blogging the Commodity Bull Market  Aug 26  Comment 
Note: This article has been published by Seeking Alpha. Coffee futures are not my favorite to trade. They're so volatile that it's tough to distinguish a true breakout from noise. Hopefully for me (I went long the Dec contract today), this move...
Weather and Commodity Trading  Jan 9  Comment 
Following the attention that the global coffee S&D has been receiving, the outlook is likely to support bullish behavior in coffee futures. Pre-flowering rainfall in Brazil , the world's largest coffee producer, was deficient last year, and...
Think in Trading  Oct 26  Comment 
Coffee is one of the world's most popular beverages and is considered among the globe's most important of the commodities that are traded internationally. Today, the prime market for trading coffee, cocoa and sugar futures and options is the CSCE...
Weather and Commodity Trading  Oct 18  Comment 
Recent flooding in the coffee growing regions in Vietnam has been leading to some support for higher coffee futures prices. Growers in the Dak Lak province have been subject to very heavy rains over the last few weeks and another wet week is...
Weather and Commodity Trading  Oct 16  Comment 
The Centre-South (C-S) of Brazil received rains late last week, and the pattern extended through the weekend into the start of the current week, taking some of the pressure off of coffee futures. The high pressure system that was stationary over...
Weather and Commodity Trading  Aug 7  Comment 
Over the last week, there has been a lot of market chatter concerning potential frost and subsequent damage to the Brazil coffee crop. Within one week, coffee for Sepember delivery went from below 1.13 last Wednesday to 1.19 on Monday, and are...
The Mess That Greenspan Made  Sep 26  Comment 
Long ago, Manhattan punters gathered under an American Sycamore tree at 68 Wall Street to swap stories and trade whatever it was that could be traded on a New York sidewalk in the 18th century. The sycamore tree, also known as a Buttonwood...
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Coffee futures are traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange under ticker symbol KT in dollars per pound.[1]

The chart at left shows front-month coffee futures prices on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) in dollars per pound.

Delivery Dates

Coffee futures are delivered every year in March, May, July, September, & December.[1]

The following is a table with Coffee futures delivery dates and resultant tickers for 2009. For an explanation on commodity tickers see commodity ticker construction.

Delivery Month Full Ticker Symbol Thomson-Reuters Symbol
March, 2009KTH9KT/H9-NM
May, 2009KTK9KT/K9-NM
July, 2009KTN9KT/N9-NM
September, 2009KTU9KT/U9-NM
December, 2009KTZ9KT/Z9-NM

Contract Specifications

Contract Size

One Coffee futures contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange is 37,500 pounds.[1]

Daily Price Limit

There is no daily price limit[1]

Trading Hours

Coffee futures contracts trade on the CME Globex trading platform from 6:00 PM Sundays through 5:15 PM Fridays, Eastern Time, with a 45-minute break each day between 5:15 PM and 6:00 PM.[1]

Last Trading Day

Trading of Coffee futures contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange ends on the business day immediately preceding the first notice day on the New York Board of Trade.[1]

Deliverable Grades

Deliverable Coffee grades for futures contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange are as follows: A Notice of Certification is issued based on testing the grade of the beans and by cup testing for flavor. The Exchange uses certain coffees to establish the “basis.” Coffees judged better are at a premium; those judged inferior are at a discount. Basis: Mexico, Salvador, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Kenya, New Guinea, Panama, Tanzania, Uganda, Honduras and Peru; Plus 200 pts: Colombia; Minus 100 pts: Venezuela, Burundi and India; Minus 300 pts: Rwanda; Minus 400 pts: Dominican Republic and Ecuador.[1]

Margin

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 The New York Mercantile Exchange's contract specification for Coffee futures
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