202603Easter cocoa1jpeg

Chocolate relief in a troubled world: cocoa cools as Easter meets macro gloom

Picture of Ole Hansen
Ole Hansen

Head of Commodity Strategy

Key Points:

  • Cocoa has fallen sharply from 2024–25 extremes, offering rare relief as broader markets struggle with war and inflation risks.
  • The price collapse reflects classic commodity dynamics: demand destruction, substitution, and improving supply expectations.
  • Retail chocolate prices will lag, but input cost pressure is easing after an unprecedented spike.
  • A 12-ton KitKat theft adds a surreal twist, highlighting ongoing supply chain fragility despite softer raw material prices

Easter arrives this year against a difficult global backdrop. The outbreak of and escalation of the conflict in the Middle East, has fuelled concerns about both growth and inflation. Higher energy prices - across crude, refined products, and gas - have fed directly into rising costs for fertilizers, transport, and industrial inputs, while also lifting food prices through second-round effects.

Financial markets have reflected this unease. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq are both down around 8% on the month, with the Mag 7 and Euro Stoxx 50 closer to a 10% decline, while core emerging markets have suffered a 12% setback after being the investment darlings in the first two months of the year. Against this backdrop, commodities linked to discretionary consumption rarely offer a positive narrative. This Easter, however, cocoa is proving an exception.

After a modest rebound of around 10% this month, cocoa prices remain dramatically below last year’s extreme highs. Currently trading near USD 3,100 per ton, the market is still above the long-term average of around USD 2,600 that prevailed prior to the 2024–25 spike, but it is down roughly 65% since last Easter when prices traded around USD 8,800. What was briefly one of the most disorderly bull markets across commodities has now undergone a rapid normalization.

The move lower underscores a fundamental principle: the best cure for high prices is high prices.

At the height of the rally, cocoa transitioned from a relatively stable agricultural commodity into a scarcity-driven market dominated by supply fears and speculative momentum. That environment triggered a predictable response across the value chain.

On the demand side, chocolate manufacturers moved quickly to protect margins. Product sizes were reduced, recipes were adjusted, and substitution became more widespread, particularly through increased use of non-cocoa ingredients. These measures may not have been immediately visible to consumers, but they contributed to a meaningful slowdown in cocoa demand growth.

At the same time, elevated prices began to reshape expectations on the supply side. While structural challenges in key producing regions remain, the extreme tightness seen during the 2023/24 season has started to ease. The market narrative has shifted from deficit to a more balanced, and potentially surplus, outlook as production stabilizes and demand softens.

The combination of weaker demand and improving supply expectations has removed the urgency that previously drove prices higher. In commodity markets, the absence of panic buying can be just as powerful as the presence of strong supply growth.

Importantly, the decline in futures prices does not translate immediately into cheaper chocolate at the retail level. Pricing across consumer products tends to adjust with a lag, reflecting hedging practices and inventory cycles. However, the direction of travel is clear: the intense cost pressure that defined the past two years is easing.

This makes cocoa something of an outlier in the current macro environment. While energy, metals, and agricultural markets more broadly are dealing with renewed upside risks linked to geopolitical disruption and higher input costs, cocoa is moving in the opposite direction, offering a rare pocket of relief.

Adding a layer of unintended irony to this year’s Easter narrative is a recent incident that borders on the surreal. A truck carrying 413,793 units - around 12 tons - of KitKat’s new Formula One-themed chocolate bars was stolen while in transit across Europe on 26 March. The shipment, linked to KitKat’s role as Formula One’s official chocolate partner, has yet to be recovered.

While unlikely to materially impact the broader market, the episode serves as a reminder that supply chains remain vulnerable, even in markets where underlying fundamentals are improving. It also highlights the enduring value of chocolate - both economically and culturally - at a time when broader sentiment remains fragile.

Taken together, the story of cocoa this Easter offers a useful contrast to the dominant macro narrative. In a world where rising energy costs, geopolitical risks, and financial market volatility continue to dominate headlines, one of the most familiar comfort goods has quietly become more affordable.

Chocolate will not change the direction of global markets, nor will it offset the broader challenges facing the economy. But after a period in which cocoa prices surged to unsustainable levels, the current retracement provides a timely reminder of how quickly commodity markets can rebalance.

For now, at least, Easter indulgence comes with a slightly lower price tag at the raw material level. In the current environment, that counts as a small but welcome positive.

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Cocoa, first month cont. - Source: Saxo
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Nestle SA - Source: Saxo
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Educational resources:
A short guide to trading crude oil
The basics of trading wheat online
A short guide to trading gold
A short guide to trading copper
A short guide to trading silver
Gold, silver, and platinum: Are precious metals a safe haven investment?

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