Cocobod, Ghana’s cocoa regulator, signed a $1.13 billion syndicated loan on Monday with international banks to finance purchases for the upcoming season, which is due to open later this month, it said in a statement.
Ghana, the world’s second-largest cocoa producer behind Ivory Coast, uses loans from international banks every year mainly to finance bean purchases. The two West African countries account for around 60% of global cocoa supply.
Cocobod said Monday’s loan, significantly less than the $1.5 billion secured last year, was oversubscribed by $130 million.
Ghana’s parliament had approved a larger $1.3 billion loan at the end of July.
The loan’s lead arrangers were Cooperative Rabobank, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), DZ Bank, MUFG Bank, Natixis, Standard Chartered, the Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa (BADEA) and the Ghana International Bank.
Cocoa production in Ghana is down sharply this year, seen at 689,000 tonnes on Sept. 1 after a previous forecast of 800,000 tonnes. This has prompted the International Cocoa Organization (ICCO) to upwardly revise its forecast for a global cocoa deficit.
Cocobod postponed announcing the new guaranteed cocoa price it will pay to farmers, which had been planned for Saturday. A spokesman told Reuters on Monday that the new price would be declared on Tuesday evening, following a stakeholder meeting.
The current price, 10,560 cedis ($1,030) per tonne, has not changed for two years.