…hopes to purchase 900,000m/t of cocoa beans
for 2016/2017
The Ghana Cocoa Board (Cocobod) is seeking to raise US$2billion
from a pre-export syndicated facility to enable it purchase about 900,000
metric tonnes of cocoa beans in the 2016/17 crop season.
This figure is higher than the US$1.8billion that was
approved and raised by the Board in the 2015/16 crop season for purchasing some
850,000 metric tonnes of the beans.
The Ministry of Finance, in view of this development, has
presented a paper to Parliament asking for approval to enable Cocobod raise the
needed facility from a consortium of international banks to finance purchasing
cocoa beans for the crop season.
A Deputy-Minister of Finance, Mr. Cassiel Ato Forson
who laid the paper in Parliament, said the loan is to enable Cocobod raise
adequate funds to purchase cocoa beans from farmers through licenced buying
companies (LBCs).
He requested Parliament to waive the stamp duty, for which
government will serve as guarantor. The paper showed that Cocobod will be
required by the Stamp Duty Act, 2005 (Act 689) to pay one percent as tax on the
facility.
As of February this year Cocobod started repayment of its
last-season loan, which attracted an interest rate of 1.19 percent.
Cocobod has consistently
been raising syndicated loans through local and international financers for
cocoa purchases. The Board is expected
to spearhead a road-show, which will involve lead arrangers of the syndicated
facility once approval is granted.
Industry analysts are anticipating
that the loan will be oversubscribed like previously -- which will reflect the
international financial market’s confidence in Cocobod’s operations and Ghana’s
potential as a cocoa producer.
In 2013, Cocobod secured US$2billion
to fund cocoa purchases for export in its 2011/12 cocoa season. The facility,
which was oversubscribed by over 20 international and Ghanaian banks, was the
biggest since 1992 when Ghana turned to the international financial market to raise
short-term funds to support cocoa purchases.
Some of the banks involved in
arranging that year’s facility included Barclays Bank, Standard Chartered Bank,
HSBC, SG-SSB, Ghana International Bank, Agricultural Development Bank,
Citibank, Ecobank and First Rand, among others.
Production
target
The Board is optimistic of achieving its 2015-2016
crop-year harvest target of 850,000 metric tonnes, though the harmattan weather conditions at the
beginning of this year impacted negatively on farming activities.
“We are on course
to achieve our target for 2015/2016. We
set for ourselves 850,000m/t and so far, from the production that we have had
till now, we are on course to achieving it.
“The weather
conditions will not affect output of cocoa yields. If you compare the production levels of last
year and this year, it shows an improvement; the country is doing well in spite
of the fact weather was severe and the harmattan season was very long.
“We are looking
forward to achieving the target that we have set for ourselves because the
performance has been good,” said Cocobod’s Public Affairs
Manager, Noah Kwasi Amenyah.
The Board set a
target of 850,000 metric tonnes for the 2015/2016 -- up from the 800,000 metric
tonnes of the previous crop season.
A combination of
factors including unfavourable weather conditions led to the country missing
its target.
The country operates a two-cycle
cocoa year consisting of a 33-week main crop (October-June) that is mainly
exported to Europe and Asia, and the minor light crop (11-week) which is
discounted to local processing firms including the state-owned Cocoa Processing
Company (CPC).
Ghana produced an unprecedented one
million tonnes of cocoa during the 2010-11crop-year, thanks to good weather and
improved farming techniques -- but production declined to about 850,000 tonnes
last season.
Government
in October last year announced an increase in the Producer Price (PP) of cocoa
to GH₵6,720 per tonne from GH¢5,520 per tonne for the 2015/2016 season.
The figure translates into GH¢420 per bag of 64kg gross,
representing an about-73 percent of the net Free on Board (FOB) price.
Government and Cocobod decided to pay bonus to farmers
at the time of sale of their produce, and an additional amount of GH¢5 per bag
of 64kg gross weight was also approved.
He said for each 64kg gross weight bag of cocoa sold
by the farmer, the farmer will be paid GH¢420 per bag plus GH¢5 as bonus -- and
urged Licenced Buying Companies (LBCs) to take note and pay farmers
accordingly.
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