Global Cocoa Supply Faces Price Sink Amid Demand Slowdown

Recent trading sessions have seen cocoa futures hit significant lows, reflecting a fundamental market imbalance. March contracts in New York traded near 2-year lows while London benchmarks approached 2.25-year lows, marking a notable price sink that caught the attention of commodity traders and producers alike. The root cause of this decline stems from a widening gap between slowing global consumption and expanding supply prospects, a dynamic that threatens to undermine any near-term price recovery.

Consumption Crisis: Where’s the Demand?

The cocoa market’s structural weakness begins with disappointing consumption data from major processing regions worldwide. Recent grinding statistics—a key metric measuring cocoa bean processing into cocoa products—revealed a sobering picture across all three major consumption centers.

Europe, traditionally the largest cocoa-grinding region, reported a particularly sharp contraction. Q4 European cocoa grindings fell 8.3% year-over-year to 304,470 MT, substantially worse than anticipated declines of 2.9%. More troubling for price bulls, this marked the weakest Q4 performance in over a decade. The Cocoa Association of Asia delivered similarly disappointing news, with Q4 Asian grindings contracting 4.8% year-over-year to 197,022 MT. Even North America, which had shown relative resilience, barely managed growth of just 0.3% year-over-year in Q4 to 103,117 MT.

This synchronized weakness across all major demand centers suggests the tepid consumption environment extends beyond temporary softness. Chocolate makers and confectioners are operating with caution, limiting their bean procurement and creating persistent downward pressure on prices.

Supply Expansion: The Harvest is Coming

On the opposite side of the market equation lies an increasingly bullish supply outlook, particularly from West Africa where the bulk of global cocoa production originates. Recent assessments paint a picture of favorable agricultural conditions setting the stage for robust output growth.

Tropical General Investments Group highlighted encouraging developments in the Ivory Coast and Ghana, noting that farmers are reporting larger and healthier cocoa pods compared to year-ago levels. Industry participant Mondelez corroborated this assessment, stating that the latest pod count surveys in West Africa showed tallies running 7% above the five-year average and materially elevated versus the prior-year harvest.

The Ivory Coast, responsible for approximately one-third of global cocoa supply, is already progressing through its main harvest season with farmer sentiment tilting optimistic regarding crop quality. Yet despite this abundance, the earliest shipment data offers a contrasting signal—the Ivory Coast moved only 1.16 MMT to ports during the October-January period, down 3.3% from the comparable year-ago interval, suggesting either a deliberate sales slowdown or logistical delays.

Nigeria’s situation presents a different concern. As the world’s fifth-largest cocoa producer, Nigeria’s November export figures slumped 7% year-over-year to 35,203 MT. More consequential, Nigeria’s Cocoa Association projects the 2025/26 production year will witness an 11% decline to 305,000 MT from the anticipated 344,000 MT in 2024/25—a meaningful reduction from a crucial supplier.

Storage Levels: A Flickering Positive Signal

Cocoa inventories in monitored US port facilities offer occasional respite for bulls, though the picture remains fluid. ICE-tracked stockpiles bottomed at a 10.25-month low of 1,626,105 bags on December 26, suggesting a tightening physical market. However, inventory levels have since rebounded to 1,726,441 bags, near 1.75-month highs, indicating that the shortage fears may have been overblown. Lower inventory levels typically support prices, yet the recent recovery points to either strategic rebuilding or the seasonal nature of inventory patterns.

Market Forecasts: A Surplus Story Emerges

The International Cocoa Organization’s revised outlook crystallizes the market’s problematic trajectory. Initially projecting a 2024/25 global surplus of 142,000 MT, the ICCO subsequently slashed its estimate to just 49,000 MT—a dramatic reduction but still representing the first surplus year following a historic four-year deficit stretch. Simultaneously, ICCO lowered its production estimate for 2024/25 to 4.69 MMT from prior guidance of 4.84 MMT.

Even more cautiously, Rabobank trimmed its 2025/26 surplus projection to 250,000 MT from a November forecast of 328,000 MT, suggesting that even conservative forecasters acknowledge the persistent supply challenge. Yet these figures still imply that the chronic deficit era has passed, with balances returning to more normal seasonal patterns after years of acute tightness.

Policy Headwinds: The EUDR Delay Effect

The European Union’s decision to delay implementation of its deforestation regulation (EUDR) by one year represented an unexpected negative for price bulls. The postponed regulation would have restricted EU imports of agricultural commodities including cocoa originating from deforestation-prone regions in Africa, Indonesia, and South America. With enforcement delayed, EU member states may continue importing from regions with ongoing deforestation activity, effectively keeping supply channels open that might otherwise have been constrained.

The Outlook: Demand Must Recovery for Prices to Stabilize

The cocoa market confronts a fundamental mismatch: consumption remains unexcited while production accelerates, a dynamic that keeps downside pressure on valuations. Without a meaningful rebound in industrial chocolate manufacturing and confectionery demand—driven by improved economic conditions or consumer spending patterns—the price sink may persist. The convergence of lackluster grinding data, favorable harvests, adequate inventory levels, and delayed regulatory constraints creates an inhospitable environment for price appreciation in the near term, though longer-term structural tightness from production challenges in Nigeria and elsewhere may eventually support a recovery.

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