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Cocoa Prices Supported by Commodity Index Inclusion

By: Barchart.com
November 04, 2025 at 12:10 PM EST

December ICE NY cocoa (CCZ25) today is up +48 (+0.73%), and December ICE London cocoa #7 (CAZ25) is up +55 (+1.17%).

Cocoa prices rose to 5-week highs today on carry-over support from last Thursday's news that the administrator of the Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOM) said the commodity will be included in the index for the first time in two decades, beginning in January.  Assets tracking the BCOM index totaled almost $109 billion at the end of 2024, suggesting cocoa's 1.7% weighting in the index could spur significant inflows into the market from passive funds that track it.  According to Peak Trading Research LLC, "Funds will have to buy about $1.9 billion in cocoa futures over the next 80 days."

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Gains in London cocoa accelerated today amid weakness in the British pound (^GBPUSD).  The pound tumbled to a 6.75-month low today, boosting cocoa that is priced in sterling.

Cocoa prices also have support from a slowdown in cocoa exports from the Ivory Coast, the world's largest cocoa producer.  Monday's government data showed that Ivory Coast farmers shipped 304,840 MT of cocoa to ports this new marketing year, from October 1 through November 2, down -16% from 365,072 MT in the same period a year ago.

Shrinking ICE cocoa inventories are supportive for cocoa prices.  ICE-monitored cocoa inventories held in US ports fell to a 7-month low of 1,815,627 bags last Friday but then rebounded slightly to 1,820,247 bags on Monday.

Chocolate maker Mondelez recently said that the latest cocoa pod count in West Africa is 7% above the five-year average and "materially higher" than last year's crop.  The harvest of the Ivory Coast's main crop has just begun, and farmers are optimistic about its quality.

Cocoa prices have been undercut by fears that high cocoa prices and tariffs could dampen chocolate demand.  North American sales volume of chocolate candy was down more than -21% in the 13 weeks ending September 7, compared to the same period last year, according to data from research firm Circana.

Weak global cocoa demand is bearish for prices.  Last Thursday, the CEO of chocolate-maker Hershey said chocolate sales this Halloween season were "disappointing."  Halloween made up nearly 18% of annual US candy sales in 2024, second only to Christmas.  Meanwhile, the Cocoa Association of Asia on October 17 reported that Q3 Asia cocoa grindings fell by -17% y/y to 183,413, the smallest grindings for a Q3 in 9 years.  The European Cocoa Association on October 16 reported that Q3 European cocoa grindings fell -4.8% y/y to 337,353 MT, the lowest for a third quarter in 10 years.  The National Confectioners Association reported that Q3 North American cocoa grindings rose +3.2% y/y to 112,784 MT, but the addition of new reporting companies skewed the data.

A supportive factor for cocoa is lower cocoa production in Nigeria, the world's fifth-largest cocoa producer.  Nigeria's Cocoa Association projects that Nigeria's 2025/26 cocoa production will fall by -11% y/y to 305,000 MT from a projected 344,000 MT for the 2024/25 crop year.  In related news, Nigeria reported that its September cocoa exports were unchanged y/y at 14,511 MT.  

On May 30, the International Cocoa Organization (ICCO) revised its 2023/24 global cocoa deficit to -494,000 MT, the largest deficit in over 60 years.  ICCO said 2023/24 cocoa production fell by -13.1% y/y to 4.380 MMT.  ICCO stated that the 2023/24 global cocoa stocks-to-grindings ratio declined to a 46-year low of 27.0%.  For 2024/25, ICCO estimated a global cocoa surplus of 142,000 MT, marking the first surplus in four years.  ICCO also said global cocoa production in 2024/25 rose by +7.8% y/y to 4.84 MMT.
 


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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