1. Coffee could rise in the coming week amid growing concern that dry weather in Latin America will delay harvests and reduce the quality of crops. 2. Coffee rose amid concern that supplies of high-quality beans could fall short of demand before South America harvests replenish inventories. 3. Coffee rose amid concern that the size and quality of Latin American crops will be smaller than expected, reducing supplies, traders said. 4. Coffee rose as low exchange stockpiles led to expectations that roasters are running short of supplies before the peak-demand season beginning in December. 5. Coffee rose as roasters stock up on supplies for the winter season, when U.S. consumption peaks. 6. Coffee rose for the fifth day on speculation that lean inventories will keep prices high. 7. Coffee rose for the first time in seven days amid expectations that rising imports from Brazil and other Latin American producers will bypass lean exchange inventories. 8. Coffee rose on concern that Hurricane Danny could damage bags stored in warehouses in New Orleans, the largest delivery point for New York futures contracts. 9. Coffee rose to its highest price in five weeks amid concern that slim supplies of high-quality beans in exchange warehouses could fail to meet roaster demand. 10. Coffee rose to the highest price in more than a month as leading producers are expected to announce a new plan to restrict exports. |