You are on page 1of 8

Opinion | Javier Blas, Columnist

The Meltdown in Chocolate Is Coming


Decades of non-investment are coming home to roost.

19 February 2024 at 00:00 GMT-5

By Javier Blas
Javier Blas is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering energy and commodities. He is coauthor of “The World for
Sale: Money, Power and the Traders Who Barter the Earth’s Resources.”

What’s happening in West Africa will soon be felt in supermarkets around the world. Photographer:
TorriPhoto/Moment RF

The evening I learned the unspoken truth about the cocoa market I was in Yamoussoukro,
the colossal capital city of Ivory Coast.

“The problem with cocoa is that’s a poor man’s crop,” explained my dining companion, a
government official-turned-businessman. “Do you see any commercial plantation around
here? No,” he said. “And do you know why? Because prices aren’t high enough.”
Save now with a special offer.
Explore Offer
Explore Offer
Only because millions of West African farmers saw cocoa as their only way to escape abject
poverty,Get
theevery
worldangle
had of the story
plentiful and its
supply impact
and on you. As
low prices. Subscribe
a result,for
youjust
and$180/year.
I have been
enjoying the pleasures of chocolate on the cheap for decades.
Claim this offer

Bloomberg Opinion
Amazon Deserves to Be Called Out for Swindling Users

The Three L’s of Real Estate Have New, Urgent Meaning

Why the ICJ Keeps Throwing Out Genocide Claims

Stock Markets Are Driving a New American Century

Unlike most other agricultural commodities, cocoa hasn’t developed into a plantation
business. At the prevailing prices of the 1990s and 2000s, it simply didn’t make
commercial sense. The money was made around trading the beans, and processing them
into chocolate — not planting, growing and harvesting cocoa trees.

Today, the crop is still grown overwhelmingly by poor smallholders 1 . Just making
enough to subsist, most lack the means to re-invest in their plots. And finally, the decades
of underinvestment have caught up with growing chocolate demand. For the third
consecutive crop season, global consumption in 2023-24 will meaningfully surpass
production – something unseen since the early 1960s.

We are all now confronting the inevitable chocolate crisis.

Chocolate Crisis
Cocoa prices have surged past their previous all-time high, in place for 46 years, as global
production falls well short of demand for the commodity

Save now with a special offer.


Explore Offer
Explore Offer
$6,000
Get every angle of the story aits
and6,000tonimpact on you. Subscribe for just $180/year.

1977 record
4,000

2,000

1960 1968 1976 1984 1992 2001 2010 2024

Source: Intercontinental Exchange Inc.

In the world of commodities, price records have fallen everywhere on the back of the
industrialization of China. At the end of 2023, cocoa was one of only a four major
commodities that still traded below their price peaks set in the 1970s, the previous
commodity boom. 2

But the 46-year-old record finally fell this month, when the cost of cocoa jumped in New
York to more than $5,500 per metric ton. The industry is now abuzz with hyperbole,
including predictions of prices doubling again to $10,000 a ton. I don’t think it will get to
that. It’s worth remembering that the cocoa beans traded a year ago for $2,500, and that in
2000 they changed hands at just $650.

What’s happening in West Africa will soon be felt in supermarkets around the world. In a
conference call with investors on Feb. 8, the day that cocoa prices blew past their previous
record, Michele Buck, chief executive officer of The Hershey Co., warned about what’s
coming: “We will be using every tool in our toolbox, including pricing, as a way to manage
the business.”

While today’s predicament could very well lead to the price gouging and shrinkflation at
the end of the supply chain, the cause of the crisis resides at the start of the chain in West
Africa. There, four countries — Ivory Coast, Ghana, Cameroon and Nigeria — produce
nearly 75% of the world’s cocoa. The king is Ivory Coast, which in a normal year produces 2
million tons – compared with global consumption of 5 million tons.

The father of the nation’s outsized role in the global chocolate industry is Félix Houphouët-
Boigny, the cocoa farmer who became the first Ivorian president after independence from
France. Under his rule, from 1960 until
Save now hiswith
death in 1993,
a special he transformed his nation into
offer.
Explore Offer
Explore Offer
the world’s largest producer, overtaking Ghana. Banking on the high prices of the 1970s, he
used theGet everygold
brown angle
to of the story
reshape theand its impact
country, on you.
building Subscribe
a new capitalfor just
city — $180/year.
Yamoussoukro,
including a replica of the Vatican’s St. Peter’s Basilica — and for a while turning Abidjan, the
commercial hub, into the Manhattan of West Africa.

Houphouët-Boigny attracted millions of African farmers with generous incentives,


including land ownership for whoever planted cocoa trees 3 . For the last few decades,
the world has benefited from the massive production expansion he triggered.

But the low prices have had consequences. The last wave of tree planting in West Africa
took place in the early 2000s, particularly around the northwest of Ivory Coast. Those
trees are nearly 25 years old, well past their prime. Husbandry has decayed, too, with little
use of fertilizer and pesticide. Old cocoa trees mean two problems: lower yields, and plants
particularly vulnerable to bad weather and disease. Both factors are at play this year --
punishing farmers who are missing out on the record prices 4 .

The local markets in Ivory Coast and Ghana are tightly controlled by their governments,
which set official prices. By selling forward, officials guarantee a price, but that also means
that farmers miss out on rallies. For the 2023-24 crop, Ivorian farmers are getting 1,000
central African francs ($1.63) per a kilogram, about 70% below the current wholesale price.

The upshot is a brutal gap between supply and demand. Even when accounting for the
damping impact of high prices on consumption, the market is heading for a deficit of
300,000-to-500,000 tons, according to my soundings within the industry. If confirmed,
that would be the largest shortfall in at least 65 years — and probably ever.

With demand outstripping output by so much, inventories will fall for the third consecutive
year. Inside the industry, I hear that by the end of the season, cocoa stockpiles, measured
by the stock-to-consumption ratio, could drop to as little as 25%, comparable to the record
lows seen in the 1970s. Considering shipping lags, it means the industry is running on
virtually no inventory at all. Cocoa brokers report that’s almost impossible to find offers for
beans right now — despite the fact that February marks the harvest peak, when
warehouses at West African ports should be full.

There’s another side to the supply problem. In the last 30 years, demand has doubled, and
only much higher prices are likely to slow the trend. Still, beyond the US and Europe,
Save now with a special offer.
Explore Offer
Explore Offer
global chocolate consumption remains small on a per capita basis, creating new markets
Get every
for expansion 5 .angle of the story and its impact on you. Subscribe for just $180/year.

Solutions are elusive. And what consumers want clashes with producers’ needs. Everyone
from chocolate executives to cocoa traders to non-governmental organizations has spent
the 21st Century fretting about the unsustainable supply and demand balance. When I
spoke to my interlocutor in Yamoussoukro more than a decade ago, I was travelling
throughout Ivory Coast documenting the problem of aging trees and farmers seeking a
better way of life.

For all of that time, farmers have been cash cows for all interests except their own:
governments have taxed the sector heavily; traders and the confectionary industry have
had more than enough beans to keep chocolate prices affordable, expanding sales to a
growing class of sweet lovers; and ultimately the consumers, who saw chocolate
transforming from a luxury item into an everyday treat.

Not everyone agrees that current prices are a problem. The farmers outside West Africa
with beans to sell – and the ability to do so at prevailing market prices – are enjoying a
windfall unseen in generations. For those in Ecuador, Brazil, Indonesia and Peru, the crisis
in Africa is a blessing. They’re sure to turn the current boom into more cocoa trees.

Signed
Sign Up
Up

Even in West Africa, the views are more nuanced. While farmers have missed out on the
best cocoa market ever, authorities in Yamoussoukro had encouraged less tree planting in
recent years to both shore up prices and stop deforestation. By the next season, Ivorian
farmgate prices are likely to pick up, giving farmers a cash infusion. In many ways, the
current situation would please Houphouët-Boigny, who dreamed of a one-country cocoa
cartel, with Ivory Coast fixing the global price.

I’m unconvinced that climate change has anything


Save now to do
with a special with the current crisis — despite
offer.
Explore Offer
Explore Offer
many pundits pinning the trouble on it. The unseasonal rains that have hurt the crop are
Get linked
more likely every angle
to theofEl
the story
Nino and its phenomenon
weather impact on you. than
Subscribe for just
to global $180/year.
warming. Yet, it’s
clear that more unpredictable weather in the future could be another handicap for the
cocoa sector.

For the confectionary industry, the prices present an acute problem. I doubt the sector will
be able to pass all the higher costs onto consumers. So margins could fall, and demand
growth for chocolate slow down, or even reverse. The producers of mass-market chocolate
– think the cocoa that goes into a pain au chocolate, for example – would suffer.
Consumers, inevitably, would pay more.

The crisis is a necessary one. The world needs higher prices to encourage the re-planting
millions of old trees — and take better care of the current ones. If every farmer applied a
little more fertilizer, and had pesticides at hand, production could recover. That, or
projected chocolate demand growth needs to slow, if not to fall. Clearly, global cocoa
inventories can’t drop much further. Ultimately, cocoa is just another boom-and-bust
commodity. Over the next few years, market forces will rebalance the market, but
everyone must brace for a few years of higher prices. Bittersweet.

More From Bloomberg Opinion:

Remember Africa Rising? It's Lost Another Decade: Javier Blas

Plutocrats Turn Your Sweet Tooth Into Cash: Rachel Sanderson

This Bit of Chocolate Costs More Than a Porsche: David Fickling

Want more Bloomberg Opinion? OPIN <GO>. Or you can subscribe to our daily
newsletter.
1. Around 90% of the world's cocoa is produced by smallholders, each owning less than two hectares of land
(equivalent to the size of about three soccer fields). The average farmer harvest between 600 and 800
kilograms of cocoa beans per year. View in article

2. The three other major commodities trading below the nominal price peaks set during the late 1970s
commodities boom are: sugar (the record was set in 1974); Arabica coffee (1977); and silver (in 1980). View in
article

3. Ivory Coast attracted hundreds of thousands of farmers from its northern neighbors of Burkina Faso, Niger and
Mali, particularly during the 1970s period of high cocoa and coffee prices. Whatever the penuries of cocoa
cultivation were, life was still better in Ivory Coast. View in article
Save now with a special offer.
Explore Offer
Explore Offer
4. The weather has been unusually wet in Ivory Coast, and to a lesser extent in Ghana, in the current growing
season.GetThe every angle
unseasonal of the
rains story
affected and itsand
flowering impact on you.
pod setting, Subscribe
two for just
crucial moments of $180/year.
the development of
the crop, according to cocoa traders and agronomists. On top, the region has been badly affected by the so-
called swollen shoot disease. The virus, which affects particularly cocoa trees, sharply reduces yields, and
ultimately kills the plants. Although the swollen shoot has affected the region for nearly a century, cocoa traders
say it's now more widespread than ever.
View in article

5. While the average German gulps eight kilograms of chocolate per year -- one of the highest per capita
consumptions in the world --, the average Chinese only consumes 200 grams. Americans eat about five
kilograms of chocolate a year. View in article

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and
its owners.

To contact the author of this story:


Javier Blas at jblas3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:


James Hertling at jhertling@bloomberg.net

Javier Blas is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering energy and commodities.


He is coauthor of “The World for Sale: Money, Power and the Traders Who Barter
the Earth’s Resources.”

Get Alerts

Terms of Service Manage Cookies Trademarks Privacy Policy

©2024 Bloomberg L.P. All Rights Reserved

Careers Made in NYC Advertise Ad Choices Help

Save now with a special offer.


Explore Offer
Explore Offer

Get every angle of the story and its impact on you. Subscribe for just $180/year.

Save now with a special offer.


Explore Offer

You might also like