Global Cocoa Prices Surge 24% As West African Supply Strains Trigger May Rally

Cocoa fruit

Cocoa futures surged 24% month-to-date in May, reclaiming the $4,400-per-tonne threshold. This rally effectively reverses the aggressive downturn recorded in January 2026, driven by renewed supply anxieties across West African corridors.

The recovery marks a significant shift from the $2,888 lows seen earlier this year. Prices are now reacting to logistical bottlenecks in Ivory Coast and worsening weather forecasts threatening the mid-crop harvest stability.

Supply chains are tightening as Ivorian farmer cooperatives stage protests over unpaid deliveries from the main-crop season. These blockades in key regions like Daloa have physically restricted bean movement to international export ports.

Simultaneously, below-average rainfall in Ghana and Ivory Coast has fueled fears of a structural deficit. Analysts warn that dry conditions are undermining yield projections for the remainder of the 2025/26 cocoa cycle.

Market volatility is further exacerbated by Ghana’s Cocobod seeking $1 billion in domestic financing. This move comes as debt restructuring  continues to complicate the board’s traditional access to international credit for crop purchases.

The $4,400 breach signals a technical breakout. After months of bearish sentiment following the January glut, speculators are returning to the market, viewing the current supply disruptions as a long-term price floor.

This 24% jump highlights the fragility of global soft commodity markets in 2026. While early-year forecasts predicted a surplus, political and climatic variables in West Africa remain the primary arbiters of global pricing.

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Chidozie Nwali

Chidozie Nwali is a Business Reporter at ThinkBusiness Africa, covering macroeconomics, finance, technology, and the continent's energy transition. With over 4 years of multimedia journalism experience across broadcast and print, he is deeply passionate about telling the African growth story. Chidozie holds a degree in Mass Communication and frequently tracks digital media trends as a Google media conference alumnus.

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