DISASTER Chocoholics Aren’t the Only Victims of Cocoa’s Surge

jward

passin' thru
bloomberg.com


Chocoholics Aren’t the Only Victims of Cocoa’s Surge​


Javier Blas​

In every sustained commodity price rally, there’s a moment when fundamentals — supply, demand, inventories — no longer matter. The cost of the molecules, whether in the form of energy or foodstuffs or metals, stops being a price and becomes just a number. The market ceases to be orderly and becomes unruly.

It’s clear that moment has arrived for cocoa. On Tuesday, cocoa futures in New York surged above the previously unthinkable $10,000 a metric ton. In dollar terms, they surged more than $1,000 over two days — equal to the trading range that in the past would have taken a year to witness.

Chocolate Crisis​

Cocoa prices have surged more than 250% over the last year, surging to $10,000 per metric ton -- nearly double the record high set 46 years ago

First, a look at how it started. Initially, cocoa’s troubles were firmly rooted in fundamentals, triggered largely by a series of crop failures in West Africa, the region that typically produces about 75% of the world’s supply. There, a combination of aging trees, diseases and bad weather combined to create the largest shortfall seen in the cocoa market in more than six decades.

The upshot was a brutal price rally that took cocoa to $6,000 a metric ton by February from $2,500 a year ago, surging above the 1977 record. Facing a massive deficit, the market was doing its work by sending prices high enough to curb consumption and restore the supply-and-demand equilibrium. Although in nominal terms cocoa prices are at a record level, in real terms — adjusted by inflation — prices remain below the peaks of the 1970s. The record high set back then equals to about $27,000 a ton in today’s money.

Since then, however, prices have risen vertically, setting fresh highs almost daily. Granted, the cocoa deficit is so large — three consecutive years of shortfalls, and potentially a fourth one coming — that sky-high prices are needed to curb consumption meaningfully. But the last few weeks of daily record highs have more to do with financial factors than fundamentals.
To understand what’s happening one needs to look at the plumbing of the market — and who’s bearish and who’s bullish. Why are some traders still maintaining short positions – that is, bearish bets – in cocoa futures even though every fundamental has pointed toward higher prices for several months? The reason is hedging.

Cocoa traders holding a long position in the physical market — owning inventories of cocoa beans or semi-processed products such as cocoa liquor, butter and powder — typically offset that by taking the opposite position in the financial market. The hedge should work; in a rising market, like the current one, losses on the short positions are covered by gains on the value of the physical holdings. But as they wait for the financial contracts to mature — as long as several months — they need cash to meet margin calls on those losses on derivatives.

In a normal market, companies use cash reserves to meet those margin calls or borrow small amounts of money. But in a sustained bull run, like the one currently engulfing cocoa, the margin calls may overwhelm the capacity to pay of a company in otherwise sound financial health, forcing it to lift its hedges to avoid a cash crunch. In that scenario, the only option is to close out the short positions at whatever price the market demands. That’s why I said that at times, prices aren’t prices – just numbers. The alternative is to default.

Disorderly markets can lead to trading firms struggling, and even collapsing. That’s what happened in the European electricity and natural-gas markets in 2022, forcing several European governments to offer taxpayer-funded credit lines to traders to meet margin calls. It also happened in the cotton market in 2008 and again in 2011, prompting the collapse of the historic trading house Paul Reinhart Inc.
In the cocoa market, I’m hearing chatter about a cash crunch as margin calls balloon. As with cotton, cocoa is a market dominated by a few large players and a handful of small-sized trading houses that may struggle to secure credit in a pinch. Regulators should pay close attention to the market with a view to helping anyone in difficulty before the issue metastasizes.

There’s a second problem. Currently, some cocoa traders face a mismatch between their physical long positions and their short financial positions. In industry parlance, they are over-hedged because they’ve sold futures worth more than they hold in actual products. The reason? The crop failure has reduced deliveries, with traders securing fewer beans and semi-processed products than they originally contracted for. Cocoa processing plants in Ivory Cost and Ghana, for example, have stopped working due to lack of supply, failing to deliver products they‘ve already sold. If delivered, some of those beans and products are being dispatched later than expected, so some traders have their financial hedges covering the wrong months. All those mismatches are forcing traders to buy back their hedges at inflated levels.

The magnitude of the margin calls and over-hedging is clear in the rapid decline of the aggregate number of outstanding contracts in the New York and London cocoa futures market. The so-called open interest has fallen by 35% over the last three months — the largest drop in such a small timeframe in at least three decades — as traders buy back their positions. Ultimately, it’s a self-sustaining problem; the higher cocoa prices rise, the bigger the the margins calls and the scale of over hedging. And as some traders buy back their positions, they push prices up further, creating the same problem for others.
Once prices become untethered from fundamentals, a bull market is almost impossible to stop — until something breaks. Brace for the current surge in cocoa to have wider ramifications than inflating the cost of your Easter egg.



 

Signwatcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I noticed some of the bags of candy are $20 or more at Walmart. That's crazy, especially since they'll be marked down on Monday.

Or they will just slap US flags or perhaps red, white and blue colors (the United States flag is politically incorrect these days) over the bunnies and eggs and keep the prices high for Memorial Day and the Fourth of July.
 

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
Or they will just slap US flags or perhaps red, white and blue colors (the United States flag is politically incorrect these days) over the bunnies and eggs and keep the prices high for Memorial Day and the Fourth of July.

....

Come get your Memorial Day Chocolate Freedom Rabbits! Can't honor the memories of your military dead without a Freedom Rabbit!

It just doesn't work.
 

Toosh

Veteran Member
After Easter candy sales are going to be akin to Black Friday. I can just see the hoards banging on the Kroger door to open so they can storm the candy isle. I'll be the lady in red, front, center.
 

Barry Natchitoches

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Husbands of chocoholics are at particular risk in the current situation.

My wife lives on chocolate. She considers it the sixth major food group, and the most important of them all.

I do not even want to think about what Easter would be like, if I did not get her some Elmers Gold Brick and Heavenly Hash eggs out of New Orleans every year.

And, of course, she needs her chocolate bunny, too…

Screw the cost! Barry wants to LIVE to see another day, so he antes up whatever it costs to get da wife her Easter chocolate…

:)
 

jward

passin' thru
I just went through a peanut butter and apple phase myself yummmmy!

I was tickled to see no one argued with me choosing "disaster" for the heading of this story, either, : )
I've got a freezer bag of full of aldi's choccies; I don't eat em often, or much, but I'm female, and when I want something, nothing else will do, so :: shrug ::
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
Anyone checked the German chocolate at Aldi's lately? OMG. And that's assuming they have it in stock and it isn't the cheap lookalikes.

I haven't seen it in ages, just the cheap junk. Aldi had some good cheese. That's what made me decide to make cheese a treat, instead.

No Easter treats this year. I'm saving my calories for Memorial Weekend. I want a beer with my steak! And a piece of pie, too!
 

Wildwood

Veteran Member
Husbands of chocoholics are at particular risk in the current situation.

My wife lives on chocolate. She considers it the sixth major food group, and the most important of them all.

I do not even want to think about what Easter would be like, if I did not get her some Elmers Gold Brick and Heavenly Hash eggs out of New Orleans every year.

And, of course, she needs her chocolate bunny, too…

Screw the cost! Barry wants to LIVE to see another day, so he antes up whatever it costs to get da wife her Easter chocolate…

:)
I haven't seen a heavenly hash egg in years. Someone posted a recipe for them on facebook today and I believe it's pretty accurate if we are talking about the same thing. I've used a similar recipe for a Christmas candy I use to make back in the day.
 

Barry Natchitoches

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I haven't seen a heavenly hash egg in years. Someone posted a recipe for them on facebook today and I believe it's pretty accurate if we are talking about the same thing. I've used a similar recipe for a Christmas candy I use to make back in the day.
Golk Brick and Heavenly Hash egg are chololate based traditions out of New Orleans.

But there is a Christmas treat very similar to the Heavenly Hash.
 

Wildwood

Veteran Member
Golk Brick and Heavenly Hash egg are chololate based traditions out of New Orleans.

But there is a Christmas treat very similar to the Heavenly Hash.
I've had the Heavenly Hash Eggs and years ago, they were available around Easter in various states we lived in but not in over a decade or two here...I can still remember the taste. It never occurred to me that I could order them or I would have for my mother.

I just checked and they have them on Amazon but they are almost out of stock...thank goodness! They have a variety pack with Heavenly Hash, Gold Brick and the pecan one. I would easily gain ten pounds if I ordered it...cannot resist chocolate.
 

school marm

Senior Member
After Easter candy sales are going to be akin to Black Friday. I can just see the hoards banging on the Kroger door to open so they can storm the candy isle. I'll be the lady in red, front, center.
For the post-holiday candy sales in previous years, there has always been a fair number of people clearing out the chocolate at Walmart. This year, I was the only person. Admittedly, I was a little bit earlier than usual--7:30AM instead of 8:00 or 8:30, but still. I only buy M&Ms now, peanut and regular. All the other former good ones--Snickers, Hershey's, Reese's, etc., aren't good anymore. They changed the chocolate several years ago. M&Ms are still real chocolate. And with the candy coating they store pretty well.
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
For the post-holiday candy sales in previous years, there has always been a fair number of people clearing out the chocolate at Walmart. This year, I was the only person. Admittedly, I was a little bit earlier than usual--7:30AM instead of 8:00 or 8:30, but still. I only buy M&Ms now, peanut and regular. All the other former good ones--Snickers, Hershey's, Reese's, etc., aren't good anymore. They changed the chocolate several years ago. M&Ms are still real chocolate. And with the candy coating they store pretty well.
Boy, haven't they ruined the rest?! Not only do they all taste awful, they upset both hubby and my stomach. I wonder what the European versions are like?

Summerthyme
 

school marm

Senior Member
Boy, haven't they ruined the rest?! Not only do they all taste awful, they upset both hubby and my stomach. I wonder what the European versions are like?

Summerthyme
Yeah, Reese's used to be my favorite. The nasty stuff never upset my stomach, perhaps because I could never eat much of it. Trader Joe's dark chocolate peanut butter cups are pretty good, but it doesn't matter much anyway since we've been cutting back. The M&Ms are easier to store for future needs anyway.
 

von Koehler

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Ghirardelli chocolate is running a sale on their squares, $85 for 200 pieces with free shipping.

Their 92 cocoa was tested to have the smallest blood sugar rise with only 2 carbs per square.
 
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