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It is not often that one has the opportunity to mention the humble cocoa bean and the AI powerhouse NVIDIA together, that too, in a single sentence. Yet, this unlikely scenario has now become a reality, courtesy of the almost manic propensity of the two disparate assets to scale heretofore unfathomable zeniths.
COCOA PRICES HIT $10,000 PER METRIC TON FOR THE FIRST TIME EVER – CNBC
— Evan (@StockMKTNewz) March 26, 2024
Earlier today, the price of the cocoa bean – an essential ingredient for chocolate – hit an all-time high of $10,000 per metric ton, giving rise to a veritable frenzy in the fintwit sphere.
As we noted in a dedicated post back in February, several factors have coalesced to create a near-perfect storm for cocoa’s supply:
- The last major cocoa tree planting spree occurred in the early 2000s in West Africa, which accounts for around 75 percent of the current global supply. Those trees, however, are now around 25 years old and well past their prime.
- Bad weather, accentuated by the ongoing El Nino phase of the Pacific Ocean, has decimated cocoa trees in Ghana and Ivory Coast. The weather has been responsible for a poor cocoa crop for the past three years. However, this year’s disruption has been particularly acute.
- The world is heading toward an annual supply deficit of between 300,000 and 500,000 tons, which is the largest such shortfall in over six decades.
The effects of cocoa’s physical shortfall are now permeating the financial sector, which is only amplifying these headwinds:
- Cocoa consumers and traders often try to protect their physical stock from price fluctuations by shorting (selling) cocoa futures contracts. This way, one position offsets the losses in the other.
- In a rising price environment, such traders and raw consumers suffer losses on their short futures position and have to continually post additional margin to prevent being stopped out.
- Eventually, the scale of margin calls becomes too large to manage, and some traders might opt to close their short position by buying back cocoa futures contracts, reinforcing the underlying explosive price action.
- Of course, in a supply deficit situation, it is a given that some traders are over-hedged as they fail to take the physical delivery of the committed cocoa bean batches, prompting such traders to then close some of their hedges by buying back cocoa futures contracts.
To get an idea of the scale of this problem, look no further than the ICE Cocoa Futures Open Interest, which shows that the total number of open futures positions is currently near five-year lows as traders keep getting margin-called, prompting them to close their hedges.
We noted last month that cocoa remains perhaps the only asset capable of giving NVIDIA a run for its money. Well, consider now that the correlation between the two disparate assets has hit 91 percent. When looking at the weekly chart, the correlation is even higher at a whopping 95 percent!
Is $COCOA the Tulips of today’s market? 🤔 Seems Cocoa has all the same mania from the Tulip Mania in the 17th Century… pic.twitter.com/LA9iYyy8ta
— Trading With Gravitas (@TGravitas) March 24, 2024
This situation is prompting some to equate the ongoing bull run in cocoa with the Tulip mania of the 17th century.