
Hershey and other chocolate makers hike prices as cocoa remains near record highs
But here's the bad news: Hershey and other chocolate makers are continuing to hike prices, saying a volatile cocoa market gives them no choice.
Hershey, the maker of Reese's, Whoppers, barkThins and other chocolate candies, said Wednesday that it will be raising U.S. retail prices later this fall. In some cases, pack sizes will get smaller; in others, list prices will rise. The average price increase will be in the low double-digit percentages.
'This change is not related to tariffs or trade policies. It reflects the reality of rising ingredient costs including the unprecedented cost of cocoa,' Hershey said in a statement.
Hershey stressed that the price increases won't apply to products specially packaged for Halloween.
On Tuesday, Swiss chocolatier Lindt said it raised prices by 15.8% in the first half of this year. The company said it was able to offset some of the higher cost of cocoa with long-term contracts but had to pass much of it on to consumers.
'The development of the global chocolate market in the first half of 2025 was a continuation of what we saw in 2024, with cocoa prices remaining close to record highs,' said Adalbert Lechner, Lindt's CEO, in a conference call with investors.
Cloetta, a Swedish confectionary company, told investors last week that it raised chocolate prices in the second quarter. And Nestle raised U.S. prices for products like Toll House chocolate chips in the spring.
Cocoa prices have more than doubled over the past two years due to poor weather and disease in West Africa, which supplies more than 70% of the world's cocoa.
Cocoa futures, which are binding contracts for a specific quantity of cocoa, stood at $7,380 per metric ton on Wednesday, according to the International Cocoa Organization, which releases a daily average of prices in London and New York.
That's down from December's peak of $11,984, but it's still 121% higher than two years ago.
And the situation remains volatile. According to the International Cocoa Organization, prices surged in early June on concerns about production in Ivory Coast but eased on optimistic forecasts for production in Ghana and Latin America. They rose again in late June after heavy rains in West Africa, which could worsen the outbreak of diseases that harm crops.
'It's almost a bit dangerous to comment on this because it's changing so fast,' Cloetta Chief Financial Officer Frans Ryden said last week in a conference call with investors. 'This is something that's moving hugely up and down all the time.'
Meanwhile, prices have been rising on store shelves. The average unit price of a chocolate bar in the U.S. in July 2021 was $2.43, according to Nielsen IQ, a market research company. As of last week, it was $3.45, a 41% increase.
That's hurting customer demand. Nielsen said unit sales of chocolate fell 1.2% in the year ending July 12.
Tariffs could also impact U.S. prices. President Donald Trump threatened a 21% tariff on cocoa and other products from Ivory Coast in April, for example, but then paused the tariffs' implementation.
The National Confectioners Association is asking the Trump administration to protect cocoa from tariffs. The group says the U.S. imports nearly $4.4 billion in chocolate, cocoa and candies each year, and the association's members export nearly $2 billion in American-made chocolates and candy annually.
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Winnipeg Free Press
8 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
US and China to talk in Stockholm on trade with eye on Trump-Xi summit later this year
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These across-the-board duties were unchanged when the two sides met in London a month later to negotiate over non-tariff measures such as export controls on critical products. The Chinese government has long protested that American politicians blame China for the fentanyl crisis in the U.S. but argued the root problem lies with the U.S. itself. Washington says Beijing is not doing enough to regulate precursor chemicals that flow out of China into the hands of drug dealers. In July, China placed two fentanyl ingredients under enhanced control, a move seen as in response to U.S. pressure and signaling goodwill. Gabriel Wildau, managing director at the consultancy Teneo, said he doesn't expect any tariff to go away in Stockholm but that tariff relief could be part of a final trade deal. 'It's possible that Trump would cancel the 20% tariff that he has explicitly linked with fentanyl, but I would expect the final tariff level on China to be at least as high as the 15-20% rate contained in the recent deals with Japan, Indonesia, Vietnam,' Wildau said. US wants China to dump less, buy less oil from Russia and Iran China's industrial overcapacity is as much a headache for the United States as it is for the European Union. Even Beijing has acknowledged the problem but suggested it might be difficult to address. America's trade imbalance with China has decreased from a peak of $418 billion in 2018, according to the Census Bureau. But China has found new markets for its goods and as the world's dominant manufacturer ran a global trade surplus approaching $1 trillion last year — somewhat larger than the size of the U.S. overall trade deficit in 2024. And China's emergence as a manufacturer of electric vehicles and other emerging technologies has suddenly made it more of a financial and geopolitical threat for those same industries based in the U.S., Europe, Japan and South Korea. 'Some enterprises, especially manufacturing enterprises, feel more deeply that China's manufacturing capabilities are too strong, and Chinese people are too hardworking. Factories run 24 hours a day,' Chinese Premier Li Qiang said on Thursday when hosting European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in Beijing. 'Some people think this will cause some new problems in the balance of supply and demand in world production.' 'We see this problem too,' Li said. Bessent also said the Stockholm talks could address Chinese purchases of Russian and Iranian oil. However, Wildau of Teneo said China could demand some U.S. security concessions in exchange, such as a reduced U.S. military presence in East Asia and scaled-back diplomatic support for Taiwan and the Philippines. This would likely face political pushback in Washington. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. The Stockholm talks will be 'geared towards building a trade agreement based around Chinese purchase commitments and pledges of investment in the U.S. in exchange for partial relief from U.S. tariffs and export controls,' Wildau said. He doubts there will be a grand deal. Instead, he predicts 'a more limited agreement based around fentanyl.' 'That,' he said, 'is probably the preferred outcome for China hawks in the Trump administration, who worry that an overeager Trump might offer too much to Xi.' ___ Associated Press writer Paul Wiseman contributed to this report


Global News
3 days ago
- Global News
Richmond residents demand answers amid city hall gift card controversy
Taxes in Richmond have gone up more than 17 per cent the past three years. At the same time, burdened taxpayers have unknowingly been paying hundreds of thousands of dollars for gift cards. Further review of documents Global News obtained under a freedom of information (FOI) request for 2019 through 2021 reveals taxpayers bought hundreds of dollars' worth of IKEA gift cards, Vanilla Visa prepaid cards and Mastercards. Some receipts have notations, such as 'prizes,' 'goals and accomplishments,' 'team building,' 'no sick time taken,' 'prizes for Halloween,' and 'take our kids to work day volunteer appreciation. 2:29 Richmond's gift card program lacked oversight, FOI documents reveal The city claims an initial review suggests they followed procedures in place at that time. Story continues below advertisement 'The question is whether people were essentially paying for things for themselves using gift cards to try and hide the trail that they were using taxpayers' money for, to spend on things for themselves,' said Duff Conacher with Democracy Watch. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy Richmond is justifying the use of taxpayer dollars to buy cards for Lululemon, Cineplex, Netflix, Fairmont Hotels and Petro Canada, saying some were for the United Way fundraising campaign. It admits that $295,000 worth of cards are unaccounted for in 2022 through 2024, after a previous Global News FOI investigation. 2:00 Documents reveal more gift card spending at Richmond City Hall One email contained in the thousand-plus pages of documents shows an order for $23,000 worth of restaurant gift cards. It was ordered in 2020 by the executive assistant to the city's previous chief administrative officer. Story continues below advertisement One person has been fired, and a criminal investigation is active and ongoing, according to the RCMP. The city won't reveal the status of a forensic audit, which is examining 10 years of gift card purchases by taxpayers.


Global News
4 days ago
- Global News
‘There should be a paper trail': Little oversight on Richmond gift card buys, FOI reveals
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