World: Orange futures rose as Hurricane Milton nears landfall

Published 2024년 10월 7일

Tridge summary

Orange juice futures are on the rise as Hurricane Milton threatens Florida's citrus groves, which are still recovering from last year's Hurricane Ian, potentially affecting up to two-thirds of northern Florida's citrus production. In contrast, coffee prices have decreased due to anticipated rains in Brazil that may improve soil moisture and benefit the 2025 crop, although the full extent of recovery is still uncertain.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

(Oct 8): Orange juice futures rose as Hurricane Milton approaches Florida, prompting evacuations and putting orange growers on alert. Futures in New York gained as much as 3% in New York as the hurricane rapidly intensified in strength over the last 24 hours. Citrus groves in key producing counties are in the storm’s potential path, again risking trees that are just recovering from the impact of Hurricane Ian in 2022. Commodity Weather Group said potential wind damage from the storm could threaten two-thirds of northern Florida’s citrus production, while meteorologist Jim Roemer of Best Weather Inc said a path cutting across the state south of Tampa could hurt up to 20% of groves. Growers are bracing for hurricane-force winds on Wednesday through Thursday, said Ray Royce, the executive director of the Highlands County Citrus Growers Association in central Florida. The storm could knock growing fruits off trees, while rains could impact root systems and uproot trees that have ...

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