COCOA MARKET REPORT Q2 2023
As presented in Figure 1 and Figure 2, origin differentials on prices of the six-month forward cocoa contract in Europe and the U.S. for Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire, Ecuador, and Nigeria significantly increased in reaction to persisting thoughts that the 2022/23 cocoa year could close with a larger-than-expected supply deficit. In June, the six-month forward contract
corresponded to the DEC-23 contract and the price quoted for the next season’s main crop. For the month under review, as compared to the differentials seen during the corresponding period of the previous season, the increase in the origin differentials in the European market was lower than observed in New York. The broader picture of this scenario could be decomposed into specificities both within markets and across origin. In Europe, cocoa beans originating from Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire traded with the highest premium followed by Ecuadorian and Nigerian cocoa beans; while in the United States African origins received a higher premium compared to Ecuador.
Source: www.icco.org
From a geographic perspective, West Africa is closer to Western Europe compared to North America and Asia. Consequently, shipment costs are expected to be lower for close destinations and higher for longer distances, ceteris paribus. The higher premium applied to African origins in the European market thus appears as a reward for quality, whereas the premium for Ecuadorian cocoa in Europe covers freight rates, which are in part due to the relatively long shipping distance between Latin America and Europe. In the USA, the premiums applied to cocoa beans originating from Africa were substantially higher than for Ecuadorian cocoa beans. This suggests that the US market currently attracts Africa origin cocoa through competitive premiums compared to Europe.
In summary, during June 2023, the high premiums applied referred to the prices of the DEC23 contract on both the London and New York markets and resulted from a combination of several factors including uncertainties about the expected supply and quality of the cocoa beans, as well as market incentives to attract quality cocoa from distinct cocoa origins.
Focusing on the European market, the differential over Ghanaian cocoa stood at US$497 per MT in June 2023, up by 45% compared to US$344 per MT recorded in June 2022. Similarly, the origin differential went up by 67% from US$240 to US$402 per MT and by 13% from US$370 to US$418 per MT for Ivorian and Ecuadorian cocoa beans, respectively. The premium applied to Nigerian cocoa beans increased from US$93 to US$238 per MT.
In June 2023, the U.S. market recorded a country differential of US$602 per MT against US$398 per MT during June 2022 for Ghana. Over the same period, the premium applied to Ecuadorian cocoa beans spiked by 70% from US$300 to US$509 per MT. Premiums received for Ivorian beans in the U.S. dropped by 56% from US$158 to US$247 per MT, while a 93% increase from US$228 to US$439 was seen in the origin differential for Nigeria.
Figure 3 shows price movements of the first and second positions on the London and New York futures markets respectively at the London closing time in June 2023, while Figure 4 presents similar information for the previous year. On a year-on-year basis, prices of the first position cocoa contract averaged US$3,182 per MT in London, up by 49% compared to US$2,139 per MT. Meanwhile, in New York, the average price of the front-month cocoa futures contract settled at US$3,159 per MT, representing an increase of 46% from US$2,396 per MT. During the month under review, prices of the nearby cocoa contract ranged between US$2,917 and US$3,460 per MT in London, while in New York they oscillated between US$3,008 and US$3,324 per MT.
In the course of June 2023, the global cocoa market was bullish and prices of the front-month contract were substantially higher, generally above the symbolic threshold of US$3,000 per MT, on both the London and New York markets compared to the situation seen back in June 2022 (Figure 3 and Figure 4). On both sides of the Atlantic, the monthly average price of the frontmonth cocoa contract settled at US$3,182 per MT in London and US$3,159 per MT in New York. The press reported that these were prices not seen in 46 years. But accounting for the inflation and denominating them in US dollars, they represented only a 6-year and 3-year high in London and New York, respectively. The market was mostly constrained by the uncertainties surrounding the supply side due in part to the adverse meteorological conditions that prevailed in Côte d’Ivoire. The heavy rains that occurred in the country’s main cocoa growing areas raised concerns that cocoa plantations were at risk of being flooded, which could in turn exacerbate the reduction in Côte d’Ivoire’s cocoa production during the latter part of the 2022/23 mid-crop, and even further extend the detrimental effects to the main crop of the 2023/24 season.
In a context where the global cocoa market has experienced consecutive years of supply deficit, the potentially harmful effect that the floods could have on the country’s production generated strong tension and thereby contributed to bolstering cocoa futures prices. In addition, since the start of the 2022/23 cocoa year, the supplies of cocoa beans in Côte d’Ivoire have been lower year-on-year. As at 9 July 2023, cumulative arrivals of cocoa beans in Côte d’Ivoire were reported at 2.238 million MT, down by 4.3% compared to 2.338 million MT recorded at the corresponding period of the previous season. One of the direct market implications of the abovementioned bullish factors was that, compared to their settlement values recorded at the beginning of June 2023, prices of the JUL-23 contract witnessed robust increases on both sides of the Atlantic at the end of the month under review. In London, prices of the JUL-23 contract firmed by 18% moving from US$2,933 to US$3,460 per MT, while in New York they climbed by 11% moving from US$3,008 to US$3,324 per MT.