Cocoa beans Monthly Price - New Zealand Dollar per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2021 - Mar 2026: 2.206 (66.32%)
Chart

Description: Cocoa (ICCO), International Cocoa Organization daily price, average of the first three positions on the terminal markets of New York and London, nearest three future trading months.

Unit: New Zealand Dollar per Kilogram



Source: International Cocoa Organization Secretariat; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Cocoa beans are the dried and fermented seeds of Theobroma cacao, the tropical tree that supplies the raw material for chocolate, cocoa powder, and cocoa butter. On commodity markets, cocoa is commonly quoted in U.S. dollars per kilogram, with the International Cocoa Organization (ICCO) daily price serving as a widely used reference benchmark for physical beans. The market distinguishes between beans and processed products, because grinding and fat extraction create separate value streams for cocoa liquor, cocoa butter, and cocoa powder. Cocoa is traded as a soft agricultural commodity, but its pricing reflects both farm-level conditions and industrial processing demand.

The principal end uses are chocolate confectionery, baking ingredients, beverages, and flavoring. Cocoa butter is especially important in chocolate manufacture because it gives chocolate its characteristic texture and melting properties. Cocoa powder is used in food and beverage applications, while cocoa liquor is an intermediate input for further processing. Because the crop is tropical and biologically sensitive, supply conditions are shaped by the agronomy of perennial tree cultivation rather than by annual field cropping.

Supply Drivers

Cocoa supply is concentrated in humid equatorial regions, especially West Africa, with additional production in parts of Latin America and Southeast Asia. The crop requires warm temperatures, regular rainfall, and shade management, so suitable growing areas are geographically limited. Trees take several years to reach productive maturity, which creates a lag between planting decisions and output. This slow biological cycle makes supply less responsive than that of annual crops.

Production is vulnerable to weather variability, including drought, excessive rainfall, and shifts in seasonal rainfall timing. Because cocoa pods develop on trees and are harvested repeatedly, farm output depends on both tree health and the timing of flowering and pod set. Pests and diseases are persistent constraints, including fungal and viral pressures that reduce yields and can require replanting. Aging tree stocks, limited access to inputs, and farm-level fragmentation also restrain productivity in many producing areas.

Post-harvest handling is another structural factor. Beans must be fermented and dried before export, so local infrastructure, road access, and storage conditions affect quality and marketability. Cocoa is bulky relative to value, making transport and port logistics important in determining export flows and regional price differentials. Because the crop is perennial, supply adjustments tend to occur gradually through replanting, farm rehabilitation, and changes in cultivation intensity rather than through rapid acreage shifts.

Demand Drivers

Demand for cocoa is driven primarily by chocolate manufacturing, which uses cocoa liquor, cocoa butter, and cocoa powder in varying proportions. Chocolate consumption is influenced by population growth, urbanization, income levels, and consumer preferences for confectionery and premium food products. Because cocoa is an input to branded food products, demand is also shaped by industrial formulation choices, packaging, and retail distribution.

Substitution plays an important role. Cocoa butter can be partially replaced in some confectionery applications by other vegetable fats, while cocoa powder competes with alternative flavoring and coloring ingredients in certain food uses. However, chocolate standards and consumer taste limit substitution in many premium products. Demand for cocoa butter is closely tied to the texture requirements of chocolate, while cocoa powder demand is linked to bakery, dessert, and beverage applications.

Seasonality matters because confectionery consumption often rises around holidays and gift-giving periods, while industrial grinding demand follows broader food manufacturing cycles. In addition, cocoa demand is relatively income-sensitive compared with staple foods, since chocolate is a discretionary purchase in many markets. Long-run demand is also shaped by product reformulation, health and labeling standards, and the balance between mass-market and premium chocolate segments.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Cocoa prices are influenced by the U.S. dollar because international trade and benchmark pricing are typically denominated in dollars. A stronger dollar can raise local-currency costs for non-dollar buyers and affect import demand. Cocoa also exhibits storage and financing effects: beans and processed products can be held in inventory, so interest rates, warehouse costs, and credit conditions influence the incentive to carry stocks versus sell immediately.

As with other soft commodities, futures pricing can move between contango and backwardation depending on nearby supply tightness and inventory availability. When physical supply is constrained, nearby contracts may trade at a premium to deferred delivery; when stocks are ample, the curve can reflect storage and financing costs. Cocoa is less of a broad inflation hedge than some hard commodities, but it can still respond to general commodity fund flows and shifts in risk appetite.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 20213.33-
May 20213.340.39%
Jun 20213.33-0.21%
Jul 20213.340.15%
Aug 20213.566.71%
Sep 20213.632.02%
Oct 20213.650.43%
Nov 20213.39-6.96%
Dec 20213.513.47%
Jan 20223.664.34%
Feb 20223.824.37%
Mar 20223.59-6.23%
Apr 20223.631.17%
May 20223.712.13%
Jun 20223.65-1.60%
Jul 20223.61-0.96%
Aug 20223.702.57%
Sep 20223.874.51%
Oct 20224.075.01%
Nov 20224.00-1.61%
Dec 20223.95-1.31%
Jan 20234.093.68%
Feb 20234.212.77%
Mar 20234.445.45%
Apr 20234.644.53%
May 20234.762.60%
Jun 20235.178.74%
Jul 20235.445.22%
Aug 20235.775.98%
Sep 20236.095.66%
Oct 20236.150.88%
Nov 20236.759.72%
Dec 20236.800.80%
Jan 20247.134.90%
Feb 20249.0727.23%
Mar 202411.6528.33%
Apr 202416.3440.27%
May 202412.45-23.77%
Jun 202413.478.14%
Jul 202411.77-12.60%
Aug 202411.32-3.82%
Sep 202410.49-7.37%
Oct 202410.934.21%
Nov 202413.3422.11%
Dec 202417.8333.62%
Jan 202519.087.01%
Feb 202517.37-8.96%
Mar 202514.12-18.73%
Apr 202514.05-0.50%
May 202515.167.89%
Jun 202513.93-8.07%
Jul 202512.28-11.83%
Aug 202512.884.83%
Sep 202511.94-7.32%
Oct 202510.32-13.55%
Nov 20259.94-3.69%
Dec 202510.000.65%
Jan 20268.62-13.85%
Feb 20265.97-30.72%
Mar 20265.53-7.34%

Top Companies

Archer Daniels Midland
Website: http://www.adm.com/
Location: Decatur, Illinois, USA

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