See Why Filling Up Your Easter Basket Is So Expensive, Despite Much-Lower Cocoa Prices: Underpinning the surge in retail prices is a historical move seen in futures for cocoa by Kirk Maltais of The WSJ. Excerpts:
"Global supply chain headaches have been hitting chocolate hard"
"The average cost for a package of chocolate candy through March 22 was $3.68 a unit"
"That’s up 10% from the same 52-week period last year."
"a shopper spending $20 on packages of Reese’s Peanut Butter Eggs at Target could buy five bags of the candy for $3.99 each in 2020. Those same packages are now $6.29"
"In 2024, prices for cocoa futures trading on the Intercontinental Exchange rose exponentially, going from around $4,200 a metric ton to start to year to peaking at more than $12,000 a ton by December."
"Prices have since tumbled back to historical norms, last month falling to below $3,000 a ton for the first time in nearly three years."
"What fueled the run-up in cocoa futures was poor weather in West African nations"
"the source of roughly 70% of the world’s cocoa beans. Excessive rainfall creating disease issues for beans limited the amount of cocoa coming out of West African ports."
"Pricing across consumer products tends to adjust with a lag, reflecting hedging practices and inventory cycles"
"World cocoa production is up 8% from last year"
Related posts:
Chocolate, nationality and price elasticity of demand (2025)
Record Cocoa Prices Are Making Sweet Cravings Expensive (2024)
Cocoa Cartel Stirs Up Global Chocolate Market (2020)
What Chocolate Shortage? Cocoa Prices Steady as Record Output Projected (2019)
Economy Got You Down? Buy An $8 Chocolate Bar For A Little "Compensatory Consumption" (2008)
