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This Article is From Jan 10, 2017

Cocoa Tumbles as Two-Day Mutiny Ends in Top Grower Ivory Coast

Cocoa Slides After Two-Day Mutiny Ends in Top Grower Ivory Coast

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(Bloomberg) -- Cocoa futures slid the most in a month in London after negotiations ended a two-day army mutiny that had paralyzed several cities in Ivory Coast, the world's largest producer.

Following an extraordinary cabinet meeting on Saturday, President Alassane Ouattara said he'd reached an agreement with soldiers who had blocked roads in the central city of Bouake in Daloa, one of the biggest cocoa areas, and the commercial capital of Abidjan. Protests began Friday over demands for higher wages, payment of bonuses and better living conditions.

The unrest supported cocoa prices Friday, taking last week's gains to 5.1 percent, the biggest for a most-active contract since August. It also brought back memories of the 2011 civil war, when futures in London surged more than 20 percent in the first three months of the year and an export ban was imposed on the beans used to make chocolate.

"The market was shaken by the Ivorian unrest Friday," Micky Donovan, a broker at Sucden Financial Ltd. in London, said by e-mail Monday, adding that the event ended without causing major disruptions. "The market is still fundamentally bearish."

Cocoa Prices

Cocoa for March delivery fell as much as 3.2 percent, the most since Dec. 9, to 1,762 pounds ($2,143) a metric ton on the ICE Futures Europe exchange. The contract was at 1,783 pounds by 12:46 p.m. in London. In New York, futures for the same month dropped 3.3 percent to $2,186 a ton.

Barricades have been lifted and access roads to most cities reopened, according to residents. A spokesman for the soldiers said they were satisfied with the deal, Agence France-Presse reported on Sunday.

"Calm has been restored, people are going about their business again,” Benoit Koffi, a Bouake resident, said by phone Sunday. “There's no gunfire anymore.”

Cocoa futures tumbled 23 percent last year, the most since 2011. Traders are expecting supplies to improve as bumper crops in West Africa help the market return to surplus. In the week ended Jan. 3, money managers' bearish bets on London cocoa increased 8.1 percent to 21,236 futures and options, ICE data show.

In other markets:

  • Robusta coffee for March delivery lost 0.1 percent to $2,138 a ton in London, while arabica futures for the same month dropped 1.1 percent to $1.4125 a pound.
  • Raw sugar for March fell 0.9 percent to 20.56 cents a pound in New York. The London contract fell 0.3 percent to $541.90 a ton.

--With assistance from Baudelaire Mieu and Olivier Monnier To contact the reporter on this story: Isis Almeida in London at ialmeida3@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lynn Thomasson at lthomasson@bloomberg.net, Nicholas Larkin, Tony Barrett

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