Cocoa Prices Fall as Harvest Begins - WSJ

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COMMODITIES
Cocoa Prices Fall as Harvest Begins
Worry Eases Over Production in West Africa
Men handle cocoa at the border between Ivory Coast and Ghana in June. REUTERS
By ALEXANDRA WEXLER
Nov. 2, 2014 3:45 p.m. ET
Cocoa prices are falling as worry about production in West Africa
eases.
Ivory Coast and Ghana, the source of about 60% of the world’s cocoa,
have begun the larger of their two annual harvests, and supplies are
now hitting the market.
“The outlook for the 2014-15 crop is positive, following good weather,”
said Edward George, head of research at Ecobank in London, in a
recent note. “Cocoa deliveries appear to have started at the same pace
as last season.”
Ecobank estimates that deliveries of beans to Ivorian ports reached
164,000 metric tons as of Oct. 26, about 2,000 tons below the same
point in 2013.
Cocoa for delivery in December on the ICE Futures U.S. exchange
ended Friday at $2,899 a ton, the lowest price since May 14 and down
5% for the week.
Prices have fallen 14% since peaking at a 3½-year high of $3,371 a ton
in late September, when fears pervaded the market that the deadly
Ebola outbreak in West Africa would spread to cocoa-growing areas.
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Cocoa Prices Fall as Harvest Begins - WSJ - WSJ
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Investors worried that the virus could cut off cocoa farmers and
disrupt the flow of beans out of Ivory Coast and Ghana.
“So far the virus has stayed out of the important production areas of
West Africa,” said Jack Scoville, vice president at Price Futures Group
in Chicago. This has prompted investors to pull out of bets that cocoa
prices would continue to rise, he said.
Cocoa bulls outnumber bears by the narrowest margin since Aug. 6,
2013, according to data from the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading
Commission. On Oct. 28, money managers, including hedge funds,
held 67,386 bets on higher prices, compared with 20,024 wagers on
lower prices.
“Ebola is going to be like civil war now,” said Hector Galvan, senior
market strategist at RJO Futures in Chicago, referring to fighting
between political factions that halted exports from Ivory Coast in late
2010 and early 2011. “It’s not going to be mentioned unless it actually
happens, but if it does, it’s going to spike it hard and fast.”
The futures market has also been shaken by reports of weak demand
in Asia and Europe, although North American consumption remains
strong.
The amount of cocoa processed in Asia, a measure of demand for
chocolate, fell 5.9% in the third quarter from the same period a year
earlier, while Europe, the biggest per capita chocolate consumer, saw a
1.1% decline, according to regional cocoa associations. North
America’s quarterly figure hit a record and beat market expectations.
Chocolate companies from Peru to Italy said this year that their
growth has been driven by rising consumption of their products in
Asia, so a slowdown in demand there is particularly concerning to the
market. Chocolate sales in India are expected to soar 14% this year,
according to Euromonitor. China is now the world’s eighth-largest
chocolate consumer, up from 10th in 2010.
In addition, a stronger dollar has weighed on cocoa prices. The dollar
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surged last week as investors responded to clearer signals from the
Federal Reserve that U.S. interest rates would rise sooner than in
other countries. News that the Bank of Japan will pump trillions more
yen into the economy weakened the Japanese currency, adding to the
dollar’s gains.
A stronger greenback makes commodities priced in dollars more
expensive for buyers using foreign currencies. The shift has curbed
buying interest in the cocoa market.
Write to Alexandra Wexler at alexandra.wexler@wsj.com
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