Africa

Côte d’Ivoire unsold cocoa stocks to soar if price standoff persists

CÔTE d’Ivoire will have accumulated about 200,000 metric tons of unsold cocoa by the end of March when its main crop concludes unless the government cuts state-regulated farmer prices.

Côte d’Ivoire and neighbouring Ghana, which together produce some 50 per cent of the world’s cocoa, are facing a growing crisis as unsold cocoa stocks from the main crop have piled up both inland and at the ports over the past months.

The unsold cocoa has accumulated because the country set farmer prices for the main crop last October some way above current world prices, meaning traders face steep losses on purchases.

The stocks are weighing on world prices, which have plunged 50 per cent this year alone, hitting a near three-year low earlier.

Many international traders stopped buying Ivorian beans for the main crop a few months ago, although local trade and government sources said the country did manage last week to sell 200,000 tons of its upcoming April to September mid-crop to international traders.

The mid-crop tends to be processed locally and is generally cheaper as it is considered to be of lower quality.

In a bid to get cash to farmers who had not been paid for their main crop beans, Côte d’Ivoire in late January pledged to buy 100,000 tons of unsold cocoa at a cost of about $500 million.

But the volume of main crop it will need to buy is likely to be much larger, according to global cocoa trade executives and experts.

Ivorian traders who buy cocoa from farmers and sell it to international traders have defaulted on at least 100,000 tons of cocoa purchases from the main crop, two executives at global agricultural commodity trading houses said.

Farmers will harvest another 100,000 tons of main crop beans by the end of March that have not yet been sold to global traders and will not be sold if Ivory Coast doesn’t drop its prices, the two executives said.

Abidjan-based cocoa regulator, the Coffee and Cocoa Council (CCC), responsible for overseeing the cocoa sector and setting farmer prices, told Reuters the market estimate for unsold stocks is “erroneous”, without giving further details.

Ghana last week slashed its farmer price by almost a third after cocoa farmers said they had not been paid since November.

Sources told Reuters last week that Côte d’Ivoire is considering cutting prices to a level that aligns with Ghana. —Reuters

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