July ICE NY cocoa (CCN22) on Monday closed down -51 (-2.14%), and July ICE London cocoa #7 (CAN22) closed down -42 (-2.40%).
Cocoa prices on Monday extended their week-long slide, with NY cocoa falling to a 10-3/4 month low and London cocoa falling to a 2-week low. Â A surge in the dollar index to a 19-year high led to a broad-based selloff in most commodities. Â Cocoa prices were also undercut after ICE cocoa inventories last Thursday rose to a 10-1/2 month high of 5.817 mln bags.
In a bullish factor, the Ivory Coast government reported Monday that Ivory Coast cocoa farmers sent a cumulative 2.218 MMT of cocoa to Ivory Coast ports from Oct 1-Jun 12, down -1.8% y/y.
In another bullish factor, the International Cocoa Organization (ICCO) on June 1 said that weather conditions and disease are negatively affecting cocoa production this year. Â Also, trade disruptions and high freight rates are impacting the cocoa and fertilizer trade. Â ICCO said the shortage of fertilizers on cocoa farms would likely hurt cocoa bean crop quantity, quality, and size next year.
A decline in cocoa supplies from Nigeria, the world's fourth-largest cocoa producer, is supportive of cocoa prices after May 26 data showed Nigeria's Apr cocoa exports fell -61% y/y to 12,497 MT.
Demand concerns are weighing on cocoa prices after the North American Confectioners Association reported on Apr 22 that Q1 North American cocoa grindings fell -2.8% y/y to 114,694 MT. Â Also, the Cocoa Association of Asia reported Asian Q1 cocoa grindings fell -0.25% y/y to 213,313 MT. Â On the supportive side, however, the European Cocoa Association reported Apr 14 that Q1 European cocoa grindings rose +4.4% y/y to 373,498 tons, the most in more than a decade. Â
In a supportive factor, cocoa processing demand improved in April. Â Gepex, a cocoa exporter group that includes six of the world's biggest cocoa grinders, reported May 11 that the group processed 49,148 MT of cocoa in April, up +16.3% y/y. Â
On Feb 28, the International Cocoa Organization (ICCO) projected that global 2021/22 cocoa production would fall -by 5.2% y/y to 4.955 MMT from a record 5.226 MMT in 2020/21. Â ICCO also estimates the global 2021/22 cocoa market will fall into a deficit of -181,000 MT from a surplus of +215,000 in 2020/21.