Coffee futures rallied as a scattering of modest supply concerns, from Brazil to Indonesia, prompted hedge funds to take profits on short bets - which data revealed they had increased at a record pace.

Arabica coffee futures for July jumped 2.9% to 129.80 cents a pound on New York's ICE exchange, while in London, July robusta coffee futures for July soared 4.1% to $1,699 a tonne.

The gains accelerated a recovery from lows last week, when arabica coffee hit a 14-month low, on a spot contract basis, and robusta coffee futures an 18-month nadir.

And they were fuelled by some data which prompted hedge funds to consider taking profits on a net short position in arabica futures and options which regulatory data showed was, at 18,682 lots as of last Tuesday, the highest since December 2013.

That followed a record week for bearish positioning on arabica coffee futures and options by hedge funds.

Extreme speculative net short, or net long, positions can spur a retreat, in raising concerns over the appetite for more such holding.

 

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The dollar hit a fresh high of more than 12 years against the yen in Asia trade Tuesday, briefly breaking above ¥125 before weakening on profit-taking and adjusting of positions.

The greenback reached ¥125.07 in the morning, its highest since December 2002, before softening to ¥124.67 around 1:50 p.m. local time (00:50 a.m. ET). Those levels compare with ¥124.80 late Monday in New York.

The U.S. currency initially maintained its overnight gains following solid U.S. manufacturing data for May released by the Institute for Supply Management. Then a bout of dollar buying briefly pushed the dollar through option-related barriers around the ¥125 mark. Some of the dollar buying may have come from short-term players hoping to capitalize on extra gains in the dollar by triggering stop-loss buying orders above ¥125, though it isn’t clear whether they achieved this.

 

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The price of Brent oil fell almost 1 per cent on Monday to about $US65 a barrel, tempering a rally that saw oil prices climb ahead of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries meeting on Friday.

The price has steadily climbed from a six-year low of $US46 a barrel in January, when a global supply glut meant that Australian consumers briefly enjoyed petrol prices as low as $1 a litre. Since then, the commodity has experienced a "relief rally", due to increasing expectation of a slowdown in supply from the United States, ANZ head of commodities, Mark Pervan said.

"There seems to be growing expectation that the lower prices are having the effect [OPEC] is looking for, and that's supply discipline in the US," he said.

OPEC, which accounts for 40 per cent of the world's oil supply, has stubbornly refused to cut production despite the glut. Saudi Arabia is reportedly pumping 10.25 million barrels a day, while OPEC increased its output target by 67,000 barrels to 31.57 million a day in May.

Analysts are widely expecting OPEC to maintain its current output, when it meets in Vienna at the end of the week.

"I'd be surprised if they do move on supply," Mr Pervan said.

"Their concern right now is of losing market share and the last thing they want to do is pull back on supply unless prices come under control."

Morgan Stanley analyst, Stuart Baker said the bank's position on an oil price recovery was "constructive" and fundamentals were improving with supply starting to plateau on rising demand.

"We're not super bulls but we're not bears, we don't think it's going to settle under $US60 for a long period, you can't replace current production at those prices," he said.

"Oil prices are going to have to gravitate higher."

 

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Pilots on four commercial flights reported being targeted by green lasers during flights over New York Thursday, the Federal Aviation Administration said.

According to the FAA, the flights – American 185, Shuttle America 4213, Delta 2292 and Delta 2634 – were flying at an altitude of 8,000 feet approximately four miles northwest of Farmingdale on Long Island when the pilots reported that lasers were illuminating their aircraft, a federal crime.

The planes were flying out of John F. Kennedy international Airport.

The incidents all occurred between 9:30 and 10 p.m. No injuries were reported, and the flights all continued without further incident.

Authorities are investigating, but at this point no one has been taken into custody.

Pointing a laser into the cockpit of a plane carries a maximum of five years in federal prison and a quarter of a million dollars fine.

 

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