Cocoa prices hit highest in 12 years in New York

Prices for the benchmark cocoa contract at the Intercontinental Exchange in New York rose to $3,429 per metric tonne earlier in the trading session, the highest since mid-March 2011, closing later at $3,407, or up 1.4%.
Cocoa is currently among the hottest agricultural commodities, mostly due to an unusual fall in production in the western part of Africa, a region that supplies most of the raw material to chocolate makers worldwide, and the prospect of possibly negative weather going forward.
Ghana and Ivory Coast, as well as Nigeria and Cameroon, are located in one of the areas which analysts say could suffer from drier-than-normal weather for several months ahead due to the El Nino pattern that is under development.
"Cocoa production is usually weaker in an El Nino year. We don't know how strong this current El Nino will be, but forecasters say it will probably be strong," said Rabobank cocoa analyst Paul Joules.
"The 2023/24 mid crop could be affected, as well as the 2024/25 main crop," he added, referring to the two annual cocoa crops African countries harvest.
The amount of cocoa arriving at ports to be exported in the number one grower Ivory Coast is down 4% in the season compared with the previous year, exporters estimated on Monday, indicating smaller production.
London cocoa futures settled up 18 pounds, or 0.7%, at 2,532 pounds per metric tonne.
Among other commodities, raw sugar settled up 0.3%, at 23.86 cents per pound, still trading in a recent narrow range, below the 11-year peak above 27 cents hit late in April.
Arabica coffee rose 0.3%, to $1.563 per pound, while robusta coffee settled down $20, or 0.8%, at $2,532 a metric tonne.
(This story has been corrected to say cocoa hit the highest prices in 12 years, not 22 years, in the headline and paragraph 1)
Source: Reuters

Reuters, the news and media division of Thomson Reuters, is the world's largest multimedia news provider, reaching billions of people worldwide every day.
Go to: https://www.reuters.com/About Marcelo Teixeira
Reporting by Marcelo Teixeira.Related
Flash Gala surpasses one million cartons as South African apple exports gain ground 16 May 2025 Global shifts in focus as Nampo 2025 champions farm resilience 14 May 2025 China bans South African beef imports amid FMD outbreak 12 May 2025 South Africa's wine industry shines with 2025 vintage 8 May 2025 Entries open for inaugural South African Preserve Championships 6 May 2025 FAO: April food prices climb as cereals and meat costs rise 2 May 2025