Monday, October 11, 2010

Chocolate Lovers Keep Nervous Watch on Volatile Cocoa Prices

World cocoa prices have been on a long upward trend, with a lot of volatility along the way. Prices have fallen a bit in the last few months, but chocolate lovers are watching nervously. What is going on? Will chocolate soon become a luxury good?

One of the factors driving chocolate prices has been strong income elasticity of demand. In the United States, a 10% increase in income has been estimated to increase per capita chocolate consumption by 9.2%. Income elasticity is a little less or a little more in other countries, but everywhere chocolate is a normal good. Global income growth thus explains much of the long-term price trend.

As for volatility within the trend, supply conditions play the bigger role. Cocoa supply, like that of any farm product, is subject to fast-developing changes in growing conditions. For example, earlier this year market-watchers were worried about a virus called stunted shoot disease that threatened the crop in the Ivory Coast, the world's biggest producer. Later the virus threat proved to be overstated. Good weather, especially in neighboring Ghana, the second biggest producer, boosted supply and prices fell.

Volatility of prices is increase by the fact that chocolate demand is very inelastic. In the US, short-term elasticity of demand has been estimated at about -0.2, and is even lower in some big European consumer countries. When demand is inelastic, even a small shift in the supply curve can produce a big change in the market price.

An interesting episode earlier this year illustrates how volatile cocoa prices can be. In July, Armajaro, a London-based commodity trader and hedge fund, took an exceptionally large physical delivery of cocoa when July futures contracts expired. The price spiked in response to fears of an attempted squeeze on the market, and competitors cried foul. Armajaro vigorously denied any wrongdoing. It insisted that it was not trying to hold the delivered cocoa off the market, but needed it only to meet contractual commitments of its own. If Armajaro really had been holding the cocoa off the market, it would have lost big, since prices have fallen sharply since July.

The bottom line? You may have to get ready to pay more for your chocolate--or you may not. But look at the bright side--if the thought of rising chocolate prices depresses you, just remember that chocolate itself is a reliable cure for depression!

Click here to view or download a free set of classroom-ready slides that use the concepts of supply, demand, and elasticity to tell the story of chocolate prices. The slide show includes questions that can be used for an in-class quiz or discussion of supply and demand theory.





4 comments:

  1. Dear Ed,
    Please contact rbarnett@seekingalpha.com at your soonest convenience to discuss the possibility of your joining our family of elite financial bloggers at Seeking Alpha.

    Regards,
    Rebecca Barnett
    Seeking Alpha Editor

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  2. Thank you so much! This has been most helpful and you have been most generous with your work. Muchisimas gracias :)

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  3. What source can you cite for the estimate of the price elasticity of demand for chocolate?

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  4. Anon: The elasticity data in this post are based on a study by Henri Jason, “Trends in Cocoa and Chocolate Consumption with Particular Reference to Developments in the Major Markets,” Malaysian International Cocoa Conference, Kuala Lumpur, 20-21 October 1994 (ICCO, ED(MEM) 686). Data from the paper, but not the original paper itself, can be found on line at http://www.cs.trinity.edu/~agros/factors_of_demand.htm Sorry this source is so obscure; I had a hard time getting a copy myself, but the on-line data cited does seem to square with the original.

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