May ICE NY cocoa (CCK26) today is unchanged, and May ICE London cocoa #7 (CAK26) is up +5 (+0.22%).
NY cocoa prices today are little changed, moving sideways after last Friday's sharp 5.73% rally to a new 2-week high. The ongoing war in Iran sparked short covering in cocoa futures amid concern that the closure of the Strait of Hormuz will boost shipping costs, curb cocoa exports, and limit supplies. The closure of the strait has increased global shipping rates, insurance costs, and fuel prices, thereby raising cocoa importers' costs.
Slowing cocoa deliveries to ports in the Ivory Coast is supportive of prices. Monday's cumulative data from the Ivory Coast shows that Ivory Coast farmers shipped 1.35 MMT of cocoa to ports in the current marketing year (October 1, 2025, through March 1, 2026), down -3.6% from 1.40 MMT in the same period a year ago.
Last Monday, May NY cocoa posted a contract low, and nearest-futures London cocoa (H26) fell to a 3-year low after the International Cocoa Organization (ICCO) raised its global 2024/25 cocoa surplus estimate to 75,000 MT from a November forecast of +49,000 MT, the first surplus in four years. ICCO also forecasts global cocoa production in 2024/25 will climb by +8.4% y/y to 4.7 MMT. Meanwhile, StoneX on January 29 forecasted a global cocoa surplus of 287,000 MT in the 2025/26 season and a 267,000 MT surplus for 2026/27.
International cocoa buyers are reluctant to pay official farm-gate prices in the Ivory Coast and Ghana, which are well above current world prices. The lack of buyers is boosting supplies as ICE cocoa inventories rose to a 6.5-month high of 2,204,098 bags last Friday.
Last month, Ghana cut the official price it pays its cocoa farmers by nearly 30% for supplies for the 2025/26 growing season, and the Ivory Coast last Wednesday said it would cut cocoa farmer pay by 57% that would kick in for the mid-crop harvest that starts in March. The Ivory Coast and Ghana produce more than half of the world's cocoa.
Demand concerns have hammered cocoa prices as consumers continue to balk at the high price of chocolate. On January 28, Barry Callebaut AG, the world's largest bulk chocolate maker, reported a -22% decline in sales volume in its cocoa division for the quarter ending November 30, citing "negative market demand and a prioritization of volume toward higher-return segments within cocoa."
Grinding reports also showed weak demand. On January 15, the European Cocoa Association reported that Q4 European cocoa grindings fell -8.3% y/y to 304,470 MT, a bigger decline than expectations of -2.9% y/y and the lowest for a Q4 in 12 years. On December 16, the Cocoa Association of Asia reported that Q4 Asian cocoa grindings fell -4.8% y/y to 197,022 MT. Also, the National Confectioners Association reported Q4 North American cocoa grindings rose only +0.3% y/y to 103,117 MT.
Also undercutting cocoa prices are higher exports from Nigeria, the world's fifth-largest cocoa producer. On February 17, Bloomberg reported that Nigerian Dec cocoa exports rose +17% y/y to 54,799 MT. Nigeria's Cocoa Association projects that Nigerian cocoa production in 2025/26 will fall by -11% y/y to 305,000 MT, from a projected 344,000 MT for the 2024/25 crop year.
On the bullish side, the Ivory Coast projects cocoa production in 2025/26 to fall -10.8% y/y to 1.65 MMT from 1.85 MMT in 2024/25. On February 10, Rabobank also cut its 2025/26 global cocoa surplus estimate to 250,000 MT from a November forecast of 328,000 MT.
On the date of publication, Rich Asplund did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here.
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