Starbucks Shares Creaming the Coffee ETFs as Prices Hit Four-Year Low | ETF Trends

Investing in Starbucks (NasdaqGS: SBUX) shares is much more profitable than buying exchange traded products that simply track coffee prices.

Starbucks shares are trading close to an all-time high, while iPath Dow Jones-UBS Coffee Subindex Total Return ETN (NYSEArca: JO) is languishing near its lifetime low. The exchange traded note, which is designed to replicate the performance of coffee futures, was launched in June 2008.

It’s important to note that JO, the coffee ETN, won’t exactly track coffee prices due to the effect of contango in futures markets and other factors. iPath Pure Beta Coffee ETN (NYSEArca: CAFE) is another product following the commodity’s price. [How Coffee ETNs Work]

Coffee futures have fallen to their lowest price in over four years due to global oversupply, The Wall Street Journal reported.

U.S. stocks of unroasted coffee in domestic warehouses is at the highest level since July 2009, the last time prices traded at current levels, according to the WSJ story.

Of course, falling coffee prices mean lower costs for Starbucks, and better profits. The stock is up 50% the past year and the company continues to expand in emerging markets. Meanwhile, JO is down more than 40% the last 12 months

Starbucks in June raised prices on some of its coffee drinks. “The price hike comes despite falling coffee costs that have boosted the company’s profits,” the Associated Press reported at the time. Lower coffee costs have helped boost the company’s profit margins.