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Indian Coffee Exports Surge as Robusta and Instant Lead a Tightening Market

Indian Coffee Exports Surge as Robusta and Instant Lead a Tightening Market

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CMB News Editorial
Editorial Desk

Indian coffee exports jump over 26% in early 2026 on strong robusta and instant demand, firm global prices and a weak rupee. Outlook stays bullish but tighter premium supply looms.

Indian coffee exports are accelerating sharply in early 2026, powered by robusta and instant coffee, firm global prices and a supportive currency, putting India on track to challenge last year’s record export revenue. India has started 2026 with one of its strongest coffee export performances in years. Shipments from January to April rose by more than a quarter in volume and even faster in value, reflecting firm international markets and a strategic tilt toward higher-value processed products. A weaker rupee has amplified earnings and price competitiveness, while global supply jitters around Vietnam’s 2024–25 crop continue to underpin robusta prices. Against this backdrop, India’s record production estimate and strong demand from European and Russian buyers are tightening higher-grade and soluble supplies as the harvest window narrows.

Prices & Trade Momentum

From January to April 2026, India exported about 174,000 tonnes of coffee, a 26.6% year-on-year increase, while export earnings jumped to roughly $983 million from $795 million a year earlier. The average export unit value climbed from about $475,000 per tonne to nearly $495,000 per tonne, underscoring both firmer global pricing and a richer mix of processed, higher-margin products. With the rupee trading around 95 per US dollar, exporters are realising significantly higher revenues in local currency terms, even as domestic production costs edge up.

On international exchanges, benchmark futures confirm a firm but volatile environment. Recent data show New York arabica for nearby deliveries trading around 270–300 US cents/lb, while London robusta contracts for mid-2026 have printed near $3,300–3,400 per tonne in recent sessions, before modest corrections. In euro terms, current futures-implied values support the elevated export realisations seen in India and justify continued strength in processed and robusta-linked products.

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Market Data Table
Schwarzer Pfeffer6.850 €/t+2,3 %
Koriander1.240 €/t−0,8 %
Kreuzkümmel2.100 €/t+1,5 %
Zimt (Cassia)8.900 €/t+0,4 %
Kurkuma3.200 €/t−1,2 %
Kardamom grün18.500 €/t+3,1 %
Ingwer (getr.)1.850 €/t+0,9 %
Chili (getr.)2.750 €/t−0,5 %
Schwarzer Pfeffer6.850 €/t+2,3 %
Koriander1.240 €/t−0,8 %
Kreuzkümmel2.100 €/t+1,5 %
Zimt (Cassia)8.900 €/t+0,4 %
Kurkuma3.200 €/t−1,2 %
Kardamom grün18.500 €/t+3,1 %
Ingwer (getr.)1.850 €/t+0,9 %
Chili (getr.)2.750 €/t−0,5 %
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*High aggregate value reflects inclusion of processed, value‑added instant and re‑exported products in the reported average.

Supply & Demand Drivers

India’s total coffee production for 2025–26 is estimated at a record 403,000 tonnes, comprising about 118,000 tonnes of arabica and 284,000 tonnes of robusta. Karnataka remains the core producing region—especially Kodagu, Chikkamagaluru and Hassan—supplemented by Kerala and Tamil Nadu. India’s export orientation is pronounced: roughly two-thirds of output is routinely shipped overseas, with Europe and Russia absorbing most robusta and instant volumes.

On the demand side, Italy, Germany, Russia, Belgium and Turkey stand out as India’s principal destinations, reflecting Europe’s robust espresso and soluble consumption. Instant coffee is a particular growth engine: shipments of instant products have increased solidly, with re-exports of processed coffee from imported green beans adding an extra layer of value. This pivot toward processed forms boosts unit realisations and partially shields exporters from green coffee price swings, though it also tightens availability of suitable raw material for domestic roasters.

Segment Performance & Fundamentals

The current export surge is being written mainly by robusta and instant coffee. Robusta exports in January–April 2026 jumped about 36% to more than 85,000 tonnes from roughly 63,000 tonnes a year earlier. Instant coffee shipments rose from about 17,500 tonnes to over 20,000 tonnes, while instant coffee re-exports gained from some 30,000 tonnes to more than 38,000 tonnes over the same period. This confirms a structural shift in India’s trade profile toward higher-margin soluble and value-added formats.

The global backdrop is supportive. Weather disruptions in Vietnam’s 2024–25 cycle tightened robusta availability and lifted prices into early 2026, even though recent months have seen some stabilisation as export flows recovered. Brazil’s exports, meanwhile, have underperformed expectations despite a large crop outlook, with shipments in Q1 2026 reportedly down more than 20% year-on-year. These cross-currents keep the global balance for robusta snug and sustain a premium for reliable origins and processed supply, both of which favour India.

Weather & Currency Outlook (2–4 Weeks)

In India’s key southern coffee belts, the immediate 2–4 week outlook aligns with the seasonal transition toward pre-monsoon conditions, with no major weather shock currently flagged that would materially alter the 2025–26 production estimate. At this stage of the crop cycle, logistics, harvest completion and quality maintenance are more critical than incremental yield changes, and exporters are focusing on moving remaining exportable stocks before the next season.

Currency remains a crucial supportive factor. The rupee, trading near 95 per US dollar, continues to underpin the competitiveness of Indian coffee versus other origins and inflates rupee-denominated returns. While any sharp appreciation would temper this advantage, for now the FX backdrop, combined with firm robusta and instant demand, sets a positive tone for Indian export performance into early summer 2026.

Short-Term Market Outlook & Trading Takeaways

Over the next 2–4 weeks, India’s coffee export outlook remains clearly positive. Global robusta demand is structurally strong, and instant coffee volumes are still expanding as roasters and brand owners lean on soluble formats for margin and flexibility. However, as the domestic harvest window narrows and processors compete more aggressively for available stock, premium grades and high-spec robusta suitable for instant processing are likely to tighten.

  • European roasters: Consider advancing purchases of Indian robusta and blends, especially for Q3–Q4 delivery, to lock in origin availability before stock competition intensifies.
  • Soluble manufacturers: Secure forward cover on Indian instant and robusta supplies while the rupee remains weak and export pipelines are flowing smoothly; pay attention to basis risk as local premiums may rise.
  • Importers in Russia and Turkey: Maintain or slightly increase commitments on Indian soluble products, as competition from alternative origins may remain constrained by logistics and quality variability.
  • Producers & traders in India: Use current strength in export realisations to hedge a portion of expected 2025–26 output via term contracts, while preserving some upside exposure to further robusta tightness.

3‑Day Directional Price Indication (EUR)

  • ICE Arabica (EUR/tonne): Sideways-to-firm; expected to trade roughly in a 5,700–6,000 EUR/tonne band, driven by currency moves and macro sentiment rather than fresh fundamentals.
  • ICE Robusta (EUR/tonne): Firm bias; seen hovering around 3,000–3,150 EUR/tonne as tight robusta supply and active roaster buying offset intermittent profit-taking.
  • Indicative Indian export values (EUR/tonne, FOB, processed mix): Elevated and stable-to-firm, reflecting strong demand for instant coffee and re-exports; local premiums may edge higher as exporters compete for remaining high-quality stock.
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