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Cocoa Rally Meets Ghana’s Buying Crisis: What PBC’s Paralysis Means for the Market

Cocoa Rally Meets Ghana’s Buying Crisis: What PBC’s Paralysis Means for the Market

CMB
CMB News Editorial
Editorial Desk

Cocoa prices are rebounding, but Ghana’s state buyer PBC faces asset seizures and unpaid farmers. What this financing crisis means for cocoa supply and prices.

Global cocoa prices have rebounded sharply in early May, but Ghana’s state buying system is in acute distress as Producer Buying Company (PBC) faces asset seizures and cannot pay thousands of farmers. The dislocation between firmer futures and a cash‑starved origin highlights growing financing risk in the cocoa supply chain. In recent days, New York cocoa futures have climbed back above roughly €3,800–4,100/tonne, reaching multi‑month highs as traders refocus on West African weather risks and tightening near‑term supply. At the same time, Ghana’s PBC has amassed 673 million cedis in debt, is unable to resume purchases, and owes growers for cocoa delivered months ago, undermining its statutory role as buyer of last resort. This combination of financial paralysis in Ghana and renewed speculative interest in futures is reshaping market perceptions of both price risk and origin reliability.

Prices & Market Mood

New York cocoa futures have extended their recovery, with nearby contracts trading around USD 4,100/tonne on 6 May, up nearly 40% month‑on‑month after a deep correction earlier in 2026. Converted at ~1.07 USD/EUR, this implies roughly EUR 3,800–3,900/tonne on ICE US. Sentiment has shifted from pure surplus concerns toward a more balanced view that integrates origin‑specific risks.

News flow in the last 48 hours has underscored Ghana’s systemic stress: PBC, historically a major domestic buyer, is effectively shut out of the market as banks move to enforce claims. Futures markets have reacted more to macro supply signals and West African weather than to this financing story, but the structural nature of the disruption is beginning to be recognised in specialist cocoa analysis.

Supply, Demand & Ghana’s Buying Paralysis

PBC currently carries debts of 673 million cedis (about USD 60 million) and faces court‑ordered asset seizure after a banking consortium moved to enforce 257 million cedis in loans. The company owes farmers 24 million cedis for more than 9,000 bags already delivered, and many smallholders have gone unpaid since November 2025. Its liquidity position is insufficient to restart purchases or clear arrears.

Under Ghana’s marketing system, PBC and other Licensed Buying Companies purchase cocoa from farmers and sell to COCOBOD, which then exports to international buyers. However, PBC has not been reimbursed for 800 tonnes delivered to COCOBOD over two months ago, leaving it starved of cash despite public statements that funds are being disbursed to buying companies. The result is a breakdown of the buyer‑of‑last‑resort function in all 127 cocoa‑growing districts where PBC operates.

Sector‑wide, Ghana’s cocoa chain is already stressed by ample global harvests, softer demand from chocolate manufacturers and the aftermath of a severe price crash from 2024’s record highs. Major confectioners have flagged weaker sales growth and are re‑engineering product mixes as cocoa becomes less scarce but remains volatile. In this context, PBC’s market share collapse from around 30% historically to below 5% has stripped it of revenue while fixed costs and legacy debts remain large.

Financial Stress & Policy Credibility

PBC’s financial distress goes well beyond bank loans. The company has accumulated more than 24 months of unpaid staff salaries, vendor arrears and statutory obligations, placing simultaneous pressure from employees, suppliers and the pension system. The state pension fund SSNIT, a key shareholder, has refused fresh capital injections after years without dividends, while two of the five creditor banks are state‑owned and report to the finance ministry, highlighting the sovereign linkages of this crisis.

In February 2026, Ghana’s finance minister publicly pledged to revive PBC as the cornerstone of farmer support and restore it as the leading buyer at fair, transparent prices. Yet, there has been no follow‑up engagement with PBC, even as courts have authorised asset sales. The gap between political promises and operational reality is eroding policy credibility at a time when Ghana’s cocoa sector needs clear direction on financing and marketing reforms.

Meanwhile, the government has already cut the guaranteed farmgate price by nearly 30% for the 2025/26 main crop to align with weaker world prices. That decision, combined with payment delays, deepens the income shock for smallholders just as input costs and household expenses remain elevated.

Weather & Fundamental Outlook

Recent market gains have been supported by emerging concerns over the 2026/27 crop. Early field reports indicate below‑average cherelle formation and drought conditions across much of Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire, suggesting downside risk to the next main harvest starting in October. These weather signals contrast with the broader narrative of expanding global supplies and projected surpluses for 2025/26 and 2026/27.

The structural risk for Ghana lies less in near‑term volumes and more in farmer behaviour. Continued payment insecurity and lower prices could prompt some growers to reduce cocoa area or switch to alternative crops over the next 6–12 months. If that happens, Ghana’s longer‑term export capacity – and thus foreign‑exchange earnings – may suffer even if global supply remains comfortable. This potential loss of productive capacity is not yet fully priced into futures curves that still assume robust West African availability.

Strategic & Trading Implications

  • Physical buyers: Expect more uneven flows from Ghana, with inland districts served mainly by PBC at greatest risk of supply disruption. Diversifying origin exposure toward Côte d’Ivoire and Latin America reduces logistical and financing risk but may increase basis costs.
  • Chocolate manufacturers: Use the current price rebound to lock in a portion of 2026/27 needs but maintain flexibility. The combination of structural financing issues and weather uncertainty argues for staggered hedging rather than full coverage at current levels.
  • Speculative traders: The market is pivoting from a pure surplus story to one where financing and origin risk matter. Upside spikes on weather or policy headlines remain likely, but demand softness caps medium‑term rallies. Consider relative trades (e.g., Ghana‑linked differentials vs benchmark futures) rather than outright directional bets alone.
  • Policy and lenders: A coordinated restructuring of PBC’s balance sheet and clearer reimbursement mechanisms from COCOBOD are critical. Without this, financing stress could spill over to other buying companies and raise systemic risk across the soft‑commodities complex.

3‑Day Price & Directional Outlook (EUR)

BASIC
Market Data Table
Schwarzer Pfeffer6.850 €/t+2,3 %
Koriander1.240 €/t−0,8 %
Kreuzkümmel2.100 €/t+1,5 %
Zimt (Cassia)8.900 €/t+0,4 %
Kurkuma3.200 €/t−1,2 %
Kardamom grün18.500 €/t+3,1 %
Ingwer (getr.)1.850 €/t+0,9 %
Chili (getr.)2.750 €/t−0,5 %
Schwarzer Pfeffer6.850 €/t+2,3 %
Koriander1.240 €/t−0,8 %
Kreuzkümmel2.100 €/t+1,5 %
Zimt (Cassia)8.900 €/t+0,4 %
Kurkuma3.200 €/t−1,2 %
Kardamom grün18.500 €/t+3,1 %
Ingwer (getr.)1.850 €/t+0,9 %
Chili (getr.)2.750 €/t−0,5 %
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Over the next three days, price action is likely to remain headline‑driven: weather updates from the cocoa belt and any sign of intervention in Ghana’s buying system could trigger sharp intraday swings, but the broader tone stays moderately constructive after the recent rally.

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Live Chart
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