Cocoa vs BTC. Introducing Cocoa Futures Commodities Trading

Commodity trading has been booming in recent months and years, as everything from industrial metals to oil, precious metals to soft commodities (coffee, cocoa) is getting hotter.
Last week, coffee futures traded in New York KC1! reached 348 cents per pound of beans, a new historical high, and frozen orange juice concentrate futures OJ1! exceeded the $5 mark for 1 pound, reaching also a new all-time high.

The macroeconomic situation, the continuing geopolitical uncertainty, as well as the overall market volatility caused by these large movements, create a lot of new opportunities.

In addition, the food and environmental crisis sweeping across the planet (a special type of environmental situation when the habitat of one of the species or populations changes in such a way that it calls into question its further existence) is creating extreme bottlenecks in supply chains everywhere, which leads to shortages on the one hand, and a corresponding increase in prices and opportunities on the other.

Both private investors and professional market participants can use Commodities Cocoa Futures to expand the possibilities of investment strategies - hedging risks and profiting from price fluctuations.

For market participants involved in the production and processing of cocoa, futures contracts will allow them to better protect their income from undesirable changes in exchange prices for cocoa beans.
In addition, for those market participants involved in the wholesale purchase of cocoa, futures contracts allow them to better protect their margins from undesirable price fluctuations in exchange prices for cocoa beans, which lead to an increase in purchasing costs.

The underlying asset of the futures is the price of cocoa beans on foreign markets. The contracts reflect the dynamics of the price of cocoa beans supplied from countries in Africa, Asia, Central and South America to any of the five delivery ports in the United States.

In fundamental terms, on November 29, 2024, the International Cocoa Association (ICCO) raised its estimate of the world cocoa deficit for 2023/24 to -478,000 tonnes from -462,000 tonnes forecast in May, the largest deficit in more than 60 years. ICCO also lowered its estimate of cocoa production for 2023/24 to 4.380 million tonnes from 4.461 million tonnes in May, a -13.1% decrease from the previous year. ICCO forecasts world cocoa stocks to be 27.0% in 2023/24, a 46-year low.

Cocoa prices have risen sharply over the past months due to uncertainty about future cocoa supplies. Recent heavy rains in Ivory Coast have led to reports of high mortality of cocoa buds on trees due to heavy rainfall.

Unfavorable weather conditions in West Africa are pushing cocoa prices sharply higher. Heavy rains in Ivory Coast have flooded fields, increased the risk of disease, and affected the quality of the crop. Newly harvested cocoa beans from Ivory Coast are showing lower quality, with quantities of about 105 beans per 100 grams. Ivory Coast regulators allow exporters to purchase quantities of 80 to 100 beans or slightly more per 100 grams.
In other words, West Africa is now exporting at its maximum productive capacity, but the deficit in world reserves remains and is growing.
The arrival of seasonal harmattan winds could also worsen the situation.

Declining global cocoa stocks is also a bullish factor for prices. Cocoa stocks tracked by the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) at three major US ports (Delaware River Port, Hampton Roads Port and New York Port) have been declining for the past year and a half and fell to a 20-year low of 1,430,974 bags on Friday, December 13, 2024 (down 15 percent over the past month).

Another important factor for prices is the seasonal approach of the Christmas and New Year holidays, especially in the main cocoa consuming regions - the US and Europe.

Cocoa prices on world markets are again returning above $ 10,000 per ton, while crypto fanatics in their manic persistence to get the last unmined bitcoin are ready to burn the planet Earth to hell and only deepen the food and environmental crisis striding across the planet.

The main graph represents a comparison across BTC and Cocoa prices over past several months.

So, what would you like to choose amid of recent rally in both assets - sweet cocoa or binary digits inside your computer?
Or are you staying on the sidelines? Let’s talk about it!

Send your thoughts and questions into comment box below to discuss about Cocoa Futures Commodities Trading!

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注释
December 16, 2024

👉 Cocoa prices CC1! hit new all the history high of $11,925 per ton.

The price of Cocoa futures has nearly tripled in price in 2024, driven by persistent supply shortages and depletion of stocks to multi-year lows, primarily due to climate change, including global warming, and correspondingly poor harvests in West Africa, where most of the world's cocoa is produced.

Heavy rains have flooded farms, and the expected seasonal arrival of dry harmattan winds could dry out soils, making it difficult for crops to grow.

The cocoa industry’s supply problems are compounded by long-standing problems (that have been ignored for years and decades), including crop diseases, extremely poor, archaic production cultures, and the pitifully low wages of African farmers, which have hampered efforts to increase and intensify production.

In addition, the long maturation period of newly planted cocoa trees means that production will take years to recover, significantly delaying the restoration of supply.

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注释
December 18, 2024

👉 Cocoa won this day, since Cocoa futures CC1! hit new all-time high nearly of $13,000 per ton, when BTC is down today, to nearly 100K per coin.

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注释
December 18, 2024

⚠ Did you know that Cocoa price spikes have been observed before, in particular, in July 1977, when world cocoa prices reached $5,379 per ton.
This mark remained unbroken for over 46 years, until February 2024, when Cocoa prices soared even higher, to more than double by the end of 2024, exceeding the 10,000 mark.

Depending on the methodology (by changes in wage levels, money supply in US dollars (M2), by changes in retail prices, by changes in consumer spending), the peaks of 1977 give values ​​in the range of $25,000-30,000 per ton of Cocoa beans in modern prices.

But the most interesting result is given by recalculating Cocoa prices in relation to Gold prices. The fact is that the peak price of 5379 US dollars per 1 ton of Cocoa in July 1977 corresponded to 37-38 ounces (more than 1 kilogram) of gold, respectively, with the price of gold at 140-145 US dollars per 1 ounce of gold in July 1977.

The current price of 37-38 ounces of Gold is already about 100'000 US dollars, which corresponds to the price of 1 Bitcoin.

This is what real chocolate gold is!

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