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Cocoa farmers fret over 70% price crash

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What began as a golden windfall for Nigeria’s cocoa farmers at the dawn of 2025 has spiralled into a full-blown income shock, as benchmark global prices plunge by nearly 70 per cent from their historic highs — triggering fears of mass farm abandonment across the country’s cocoa belt.

Just months ago, global cocoa prices surged to almost $11,000 per ton, offering farmers the promise of long-awaited prosperity after years of volatile returns. Today, that optimism has evaporated. Prices have sunk below $4,000 per metric ton — a 2.5-year low that is rippling across the entire global cocoa supply chain and leaving producers scrambling for survival.

The downturn gathered pace this week as March ICE New York cocoa futures fell by 5.50 per cent, while London’s ICE contract dropped 3.22 per cent in a single trading session. For Nigeria — the world’s fifth-largest cocoa producer with an annual output estimated between 280,000 and 300,000 metric tons — the reversal has arrived with devastating speed.

Across West Africa’s cocoa belt, the impact is already being felt. Ghana last week cut its official farmgate cocoa price by 28.6 per cent to 41,392 cedis, roughly $3,764 per ton, for the remainder of the 2025/26 season in a bid to align domestic payments with weakened global benchmarks. Côte d’Ivoire is widely expected to follow, with authorities in Abidjan now reviewing the country’s fixed farmgate price of CFA2,800 per kilogramme.

At the annual meeting of the World Cocoa Foundation in Amsterdam this week, WCF President Chris Vincent admitted the scale of the crisis had kept senior officials from both Ghana and Ivory Coast away from the gathering. “The market volatility is placing a strain on farms and institutions in Ghana and Ivory Coast,” Vincent said. With both countries now recovering from earlier supply disruptions and global cocoa stocks replenishing, the market dynamic that once favoured Nigeria has reversed sharply — leaving local farmers exposed to the full force of international commodity cycles.

Research Director, Cocoa Research Institute of Nigeria, Dr. Sam Orisajo, described the slump as a predictable consequence of shifting supply-and-demand fundamentals.

“When supply exceeds demand, the price of cocoa will drop, and if we check it very well, that is exactly what is actually happening right now — the same principle that drives crude oil prices,” he said.

Orisajo stressed that domestic pricing remains hostage to forces far beyond Nigeria’s borders. “The price fixing is not actually determined in Nigeria. It is based on international markets, and whatever happens in the international market determines the ripple effect that will come on Nigeria,” he explained.

According to him, cocoa prices had soared to the equivalent of ₦18 million per ton at the height of the surge after disease outbreaks crippled production in the world’s two dominant suppliers.

“Ghana was having a problem at that time — a cocoa swollen shoot virus — and the only cure was to uproot their cocoa trees. Because they couldn’t get cocoa from those two countries, Nigeria became the only place buyers could turn to for high-quality cocoa, and when demand outstrips supply, the price will go up. That is what actually created the price surge,” , he said.

But with production in both Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire rebounding, the temporary imbalance has now swung in the opposite direction.

“Now that they have gotten over the initial shock and they have enough cocoa, we now have more supply,” Orisajo noted, urging farmers to remain calm. “Cocoa will go up and come down. This is the nature of the commodity. What farmers must understand is that these cycles are regular, and those who manage their resources well during the high periods will be better placed to weather the lows.”

Even so, anxiety is mounting among hundreds of thousands of smallholder farmers across Ondo, Osun, Cross River and Edo states, whose livelihoods depend heavily on cocoa revenues.The Cocoa Farmers Association of Nigeria has warned that domestic production could fall by 11 per cent year-on-year to about 305,000 metric tons in the 2025/26 season — a decline that may offer marginal price support but does little to cushion the immediate cash-flow crisis. National President of the association, Adeola Adegoke, said farmers are increasingly frustrated by what they see as opaque global pricing mechanisms. “We must realise that the cocoa market has been managed by unknown forces at the international market — the London market — who determine cocoa prices without considering the investment in it, like inputs and labour costs, before arriving at the actual market price,” he said.

Adegoke warned that the consequences of inaction could be severe. “We are heading for serious problems, as our cocoa farmers have vowed to cut down their cocoa trees and replace them with other viable alternative crops or commodities if the downturn in cocoa prices continues and no assurances are given that their investment will be protected,” he said. According to him, such a move could permanently erode the nationa’s cocoa production capacity at a time when the sector is already weakened by ageing plantations, chronically low yields and intensifying climate variability.

Farmers and industry stakeholders are renewing calls for the reinstatement of a National Cocoa Management Board to regulate the sector and stabilise producer incomes.

“There has been a joint and sustained demand for the reintroduction of a Nigerian Cocoa Board to regulate the sector, coordinate development efforts, and drive Nigeria’s cocoa sustainability growth,” Adegoke said.

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National Pension Commission (PenCom) changes price disclosure rule

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National Pension Commission (PenCom) has directed Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) to discontinue the publication of daily unit prices for Retirement Savings Account (RSA) and Retiree Funds on their websites, replacing the requirement with a six-month disclosure of returns based on a three-year rolling average.

The directive was contained in a circular issued by the commission.

Under the new guideline, PFAs must stop implementing Section 2.0 (iv) of the Commission’s March 23, 2013 circular, which required them to display daily unit prices for the last seven days.

Instead, they are to publish on their websites the last six months’ rate of return — calculated as a 36-month compounded rolling average in line with the Circular for the Calculation and Reporting of Rate of Returns by Licensed Pension Fund Operators (LPFOs).

According to the commission, the rate of return must be clearly displayed on the homepage of each PFA’s website.

For instance, the six-month disclosure covering April to September 2025 would reflect the 36-month compounded returns ending in each of those months.

This has however raised transparency concerns in the pension industry.

The 2013 circular on Minimum Information to be displayed on PFA Websites formed part of PenCom’s transparency framework for the Contributory Pension Scheme.

The latest addendum modifies that requirement but does not remove PFAs’ obligation to disclose performance information.

Industry watchers say the development may reignite debate over the balance between long-term investment reporting and real-time transparency in Nigeria’s pension industry.

All enquiries on the addendum, the Commission said, should be directed to its Surveillance Department.

An industry analyst who does not want her name mentioned said the move could reduce contributors’ access to real-time performance data.

She said: “Daily unit prices allowed RSA holders to independently track short-term movements and detect fluctuations in fund valuation.

“With only a three-year rolling average now required, contributors will no longer see recent performance in isolation”, she noted.

The analyst added that while pension funds are long-term vehicles, removing daily disclosure raises concerns about information asymmetry.

“PFAs will still compute daily valuations internally. The issue is whether contributors should be denied access to data that already exists,” the analyst said.

However, another pension expert defended the directive, noting that pensions are structured for long-term accumulation and should be assessed over extended periods.

“A 36-month rolling average smooth’s out short-term volatility and provides a more accurate reflection of sustained performance,” the expert said, warning that excessive focus on daily fluctuations could encourage reactionary fund switching.

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Dollar rises in black market on Monday, traders quote new exchange rate

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Dollar edges higher against the naira in black market trading Dollar edges higher against the naira in black market trading

The United States dollar at the parallel market increased in value on Monday, Febuary 23 with traders quote at N1,375/$ as the new selling exchange rate.

The new rate is a slight depreciation for the naira when compared to N1,343 a dollar market closed on Friday, February 20, 2026.

Abdulahhi, a forex dealer, told Legit.ng that the new exchange rate follows renew demand in the market.

“I am currently selling dollars at N1,375/$1 and buying at N1,355/$1. The pound is trading at N1,845 to sell and N1,805 to buy, while the euro is also moving steadily in the market.

“It seems this week the dollar will return to over N1,400. I have been getting a lot of request.”

The fall of the naira comes as BDC operators continue to face difficulties in accessing dollars from commercial banks.

BDCs can get dollar

The apex bank had previously issued a circular allowing licensed BDCs to access foreign exchange through authorised dealers at the prevailing market rate.

Under the directive, each BDC is permitted to purchase up to $150,000 weekly, subject to Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements and due diligence checks, Punch reports.

Leadership reported that despite a policy announcement, some operators disclosed that no transactions have been completed under the new arrangement.

A BDC operator, who requested anonymity, said the directive remains largely unimplemented. According to him, the circular provides that disbursements will be made through settlement accounts, a provision that has raised operational concerns.

He questioned the feasibility of seamless, real-time transfers between domiciliary accounts across different banks, noting that such infrastructure may not yet be fully in place.

The operator added that while commercial banks appear supportive of the policy, many are still developing internal processes to align with the CBN’s directive.

He explained that BDCs are required to submit bid orders through their banks, which would then access the market on their behalf.

Naira in the official market

Meanwhile, in the Nigerian Foreign Exchange Market (NAFEM), the naira closed against the US dollar on Friday, February 20 at N1,346.32/$1 from N1,341.35/$1 a day earlier.

At the GTBank FX desk, the naira weakened by N7 against the dollar to quote N1,356/$1.

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