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Rich Asplund

Cocoa Prices Rebound as Dollar Weakness Sparks Short Covering

May ICE NY cocoa (CCK23) on Tuesday closed up +46 (+1.60%), and May ICE London cocoa #7 (CAK23) closed up +17 (+0.80%).

Cocoa prices Tuesday posted moderate gains.  A slump in the dollar index (DXY00) Tuesday to a 2-month low sparked short covering in cocoa futures.  However, gains in London cocoa were limited after the British pound (^GBPUSD) rallied to a 9-3/4 month high against the dollar.  A stronger pound undercuts cocoa priced in sterling.  

On Monday, cocoa prices retreated on an easing of cocoa crop quality concerns in West Africa.  Ivory Coast and Ghana cocoa farmers report cocoa bean counts of 115 per 100 grams for this year’s mid-crop, above the average of 80 to 100 per 100 grams that cocoa exporters typically look for.  

An increase in current U.S. cocoa inventories is bearish for prices.  ICE-monitored cocoa inventories held in U.S. port warehouses on Tuesday rose to a 3-1/2 month high of  5,356,631 bags

Last Friday, NY cocoa posted a 2-1/3 year nearest-futures high, and London cocoa posted a 3-3/4 month high as smaller cocoa supplies from the Ivory Coast sparked fund buying and boosted prices.  The Ivory Coast Agriculture Minister said last Friday that the Ivory Coast mid-crop, the smaller of the country's two annual harvests that begin April 1, is expected to fall -25% y/y to 450,000 MT.

Smaller cocoa supplies from the Ivory Coast are bullish for prices.  On Monday,  Ivory Coast government data showed that farmers sent a cumulative 1.81 MMT of cocoa to Ivory Coast ports for the 2022/23 marketing year (October 1 through April 1), down -2.7% y/y.  The Ivory Coast is the largest cocoa producer in the world.  

The monthly report from the International Cocoa Organization (ICCO) on March 24 was also supportive for prices as the report said cocoa exports from the Ivory Coast fell -9.3% y/y to 530,314 MT between October and January, citing "the detrimental effects of cocoa-related diseases like the Cocoa Swollen Shoot Virus Disease."    

Cocoa prices have support from projections last month from the ICCO that global 2022/23 cocoa stockpiles would fall -3.5% y/y to 1.653 MMT.  In addition, ICCO said, "the expectation of a supply deficit has been compounded with weather variations, especially in West Africa."  On the bearish side, the ICCO forecast 2022/23 global cocoa production would climb +4.1% y/y to 5.017 MMT, and global cocoa grindings would fall -0.6% y/y to 5.027 MMT.

Concern about the quality of some West African cocoa crops has limited any declines in cocoa prices.  Cocoa farmers continue to struggle with the lack of fertilizer and pesticides as the war in Ukraine has limited Russian exports of potash and other fertilizers worldwide.

An increase in cocoa exports from Nigeria is bearish for prices after the Cocoa Association of Nigeria reported last Monday that Nigeria's Feb cocoa exports rose +15% y/y to 43,405 MT.  Nigeria is the world's fifth-largest cocoa bean producer.

An increase in European cocoa supplies is negative for London cocoa prices after ICE monitored EU cocoa inventories on March 15 rose to a 6-1/4 month high of 139,060 MT.  

On the bearish side, Ivory Coast's cocoa regulator said February 22 that it would restrict some multinational traders from additional cocoa bean purchases for exports.  Le Conseil Cafe-Cacao, the Ivory Coast's cocoa regulator, said it blocked Barry Callebaut and Cargill from buying extra cocoa beans after both companies reached the amounts stipulated in their current contracts.  

Global cocoa demand is tepid and is a negative factor for cocoa prices.  On January 19, the National Confectioners Association reported that Q4 North American cocoa grindings fell -8.1% y/y to 107,130 MT.  Also, the European Cocoa Association reported on January 19 that European Q4 cocoa grindings fell -1.7% y/y to 359,577 MT.  On January 18, the Cocoa Association of Asia reported that Asia Q4 cocoa grindings fell -0.2% y/y to 230,806 MT.  

The quarterly report from the ICCO on December 1 was bullish for cocoa prices after ICCO said global 2021/22 cocoa production fell -8.0% y/y to 4.823 MMT as unfavorable weather and disease hampered cocoa yields.  ICCO also revised its 2021/22 global cocoa production figure downward by -419,000 MT from September.  ICCO also raised the 2021/22 global cocoa deficit to -306,000 MT from a Sep forecast of -230,000 MT.  In 2020/21, global cocoa production rose to a record 5.242 MMT, and the global cocoa market was in a surplus of +209,000 MT.

Cocoa Prices Retreat As Cocoa Crop Quality Concerns In West Africa Ease

Cocoa Prices Climb On The Outlook For A Smaller Ivory Coast Mid-Crop

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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