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Thursday, March 3, 2011

Key political risks to watch in Ivory Coast-FACTBOX

A week of fierce gun battles between forces backing Laurent Gbagbo and his rival Alassane Ouattara in a dispute over the presidency may bring the prospect of civil war in Ivory Coast ever closer.
A political stalemate over the disputed November poll has plunged the world's top cocoa grower into violent turmoil, as pro-Ouattara insurgents have seized control of parts of Abidjan and rebels running the north took a town in Gbagbo territory.

U.N.-certified results showed Ouattara won by 8 points but Gbabgo has refused to concede -- defying international pressure, Western sanctions and threat by West African leaders to use force to oust him if he does not step down.

Five presidents under an African Union mandate have given themselves an extra month, until the end of March, to come up with a solution, but with AK-47 and heavy weapons fire echoing through Abidjan on a daily basis, few hold out much hope.

Political violence has killed well over 300 people -- diplomats think the real figure may be a multiple of that -- and spawned some 130,000 refugees, 70,000 of them fleeing across the border into Liberia. Here are the main risks:

VIOLENCE ESCALATING
Despite mediation efforts, both sides are entrenched, with Ouattara accepting only Ggagbo stepping down and he refusing.
Although enjoying almost unanimous international backing, Ouattara and the government he has named remain constricted to a U.N.-protected hotel, which is blockaded by the security forces.

Gbagbo may be under U.S. and EU-imposed sanctions but he controls the main government buildings. Attempts at protests by his supporters were crushed. An armed uprising has destablised parts of Abidjan and clashes erupted between pro-Gbagbo forces and rebels controlling the north since 2002-3 civil war.

What to watch:
- A week of fighting with AK-47s, machine guns and heavier weapons in the northern suburb of Abobo has left insurgents in control of much of it and sporadic fighting has spread to other parts of Abidjan, including Koumassi, in the south.

- An unknown quantity are the army defections and desertions from Gbagbo's camp, which are believed to be weakening his base.

- Responding to a call by Gbagbo's youth leader Charles Ble Goude to help fight the insurgency, his "Young Patriots", angry youths armed with sticks, machetes and guns, have set up roadblocks everywhere. Some suspected rebels have been killed by mobs and motorists are sometimes robbed at these checkpoints.

- Fighting has also resumed in the west, a tinderbox of ethnic and land tensions, between pro-Gbagbo forces and allied militias. The rebels seized control of the small town Zouan-Hounien from across the ceasefire line last week and sporadic skirmishes have continued since.

- Whether the clashes will fizzle out into a new stalemate or tip Ivory Coast back to all out war is hard to say.

THE INTERNATIONAL DIMENSION
Few African poll disputes have attracted international attention like this. Gbagbo's inviting the U.N. to certify results, and then defying them brought condemnations from the U.N. Security Council, EU, United States and African leaders.
Rhetoric by Gbagbo's officials and state TV has denounced what they term an international conspiracy, led by Western powers, with the complicity of African nations. Foreigners are increasingly attacked by pro-Gbagbo youths.
What to watch:
- The United Nations mission is also under attack by the pro-Gbagbo military and Young Patriot civilians, whose strategy appears to be to provoke them into opening fire in order to spark a backlash, as with French forces in 2004.
- U.N. sources say two helicopter gunships they urgently needed have now arrived, which they believe to be a "game changer" in giving them superiority over hostile forces.

- ECOWAS has threatened to use force to oust Gbagbo, but many doubt the viability of this. Nigeria's Foreign Minister Odein Ajumogobia says that would need to be U.N.-led and would be more likely to involve an aerial and naval blockade than deploying troops to its cities.

- Angola was formerly a staunch Gbagbo ally, but is wavering. Angolan officials told the AU Gbagbo had requested money last month but they refused him.

- Meanwhile, an AU set up a panel of five heads of state -- from South Africa, Tanzania, Mauritania, Burkina Faso and Chad -- has yet to come up with a solution to the crisis.

- For now, the AU has not back-tracked on its decision to recognise Ouattara, but it is unclear what it can come up with that is more appealing than exile and immunity already offered Ggagbo. South African president Jacob Zuma is thought to favour a compromise like power sharing or a recount. There is talk the AU could propose a new poll, which is unlikely please anyone.

COCOA
This year's crop from the world's top grower appears to be a bumper one, but most exporters are unable to ship any out. A ban ordered by Ouattara on all new registrations for exports after Jan. 24 and EU sanctions on the port and the regulatory body have created turmoil and exports are greatly reduced.

Stocks of unexported cocoa at ports in top grower Ivory Coast reached 433,296 tonnes by Feb. 7, Coffee and Cocoa Bourse (BCC) data obtained by Reuters showed.

Fears of unrest have driven futures to 32-year highs.

What to watch:
-- The Gbagbo government has called on exporters to ignore the ban and threatened to tax them on stocks regardless, but it looks like exports are set to dry up, as there are few ships, little cash and no one wants to be seen violating sanctions.

-- The market will closely watch how beans already cleared for export actually leave the country's two ports. Exporters estimated arrivals last week at just 1,000 tonnes.

-- This raises the question of what happens to the rest, forecast overall at around 1.3 million tonnes. Smuggling out through Ghana, Liberia and Togo, via Burkina Faso, is rising.

-- Fears over long-term structural decline, caused by the lack of investment and reform in the sector, have given rise to estimates of future crops as low as 700,000 tonnes.

ECONOMY
Violence, instability, an international bank exodus and sanctions on cocoa have sent the economy into a tailspin.

A huge liquidity crisis ensued when pro-Gbabgo forces seized control of the local branch of West Africa's central bank, in retaliation for it no longer recognising his government, forcing it to cut off the country completely.

International banks closed up shop one after the other last month, complaining of problems clearing cheques and physical threats by pro-Gbagbo forces.

Gbagbo forcibly nationalised two French banks in the middle of last month and promised to re-open them to pay civil servants salaries, but has failed to do so yet.

Years of crisis left growth at close to zero since the civil war, but it picked up late last decade. Analysts now think the economy will contract sharply until the crisis is resolved.

What to watch:
-- Economic colapse? Sanctions -- ranging from EU measures against the port and cocoa bodies to regional leaders cutting off Gbagbo's access to the central bank -- are starting to bite.
These measures will make life harder for ordinary Ivorians as cash and imports dry up, potentially leading to unrest.

-- New Currency. Gbagbo's camp is looking at the possibility of pulling out the West Africa CFA franc zone as a way around restrictions. Analysts question the viability of any such move, which would also have a spillover across the region.

-- Eurobond. Ivory Coast defaulted on a coupon payment on a $2.3 billion Eurobond in late January, sending its yield soaring and freezing itself out of debt markets. The bond is listed on the Emerging Markets Bond Index (EMBI).

-- Bourse. The nation hosted West Africa's franc-zone BRVM bourse, but it was forced to close after pro-Gbagbo soldiers invaded its offices. It re-opened in Mali on Tuesday, but may well move back if the crisis is resolved. It is worth just over $6 billion, with another $800 million of bonds.

-- Debt relief. Talks with the World Bank and IMF to slash $3 billion off Ivory Coast's external debt are suspended. If Ouattara takes power, though, they could easily restart.
-- Gold mining firms, including Randgold Resources and Newcrest Mining, say the crisis hurt operations.

-- Oil. Ivory Coast produces 50,000 bpd from three fields operated by Canadian Natural Resources and does not so far affected by sanctions yet. Offshore may hold more oil but little exploration is going on.

source: http://www.forexyard.com/en/news/Key-political-risks-to-watch-in-Ivory-Coast-2011-03-03T083907Z-FACTBOX

Ivory Coast president cuts off power and water to north

The Ivory Coast president, Laurent Gbagbo, has cut off electricity and water supplies to millions of people in the north of the country "for political reasons", the UN has said.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/mar/03/ivory-coast-president-cuts-power-north

The national power company reported that armed men entered its buildings on Monday night and ordered the shutdown, the latest step in an increasingly violent move towards civil war.

"The statement of the electricity company (says) this energy shortage is not due to technical issues," a UN official, Ndolamb Ngokwey, told the BBC. "They clearly said it has to do with the political situation, so it was cut for political reasons."

A war eight years ago divided the country into a rebel-controlled north and a loyalist south. Issia Doumbia, a spokesman for the New Forces rebels, who control the north and are loyal to Gbagbo's rival Alassane Ouattara, told the Associated Press: "Millions of people across the north are without water or electricity. During the entire war, Gbagbo never cut the people off. But now, things are turning bad fast."

The rebels have operated a de facto government since 2002. Services have continued to function but the rebels have been widely accused of corruption.

Meanwhile, the UN has apologised to Belarus for falsely alleging it broke an arms embargo against Ivory Coast. The office of the secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, had reported on Sunday that, in "a serious violation" of UN sanctions, Belarus supplied three attack helicopters to Gbagbo's military forces.

But Alain le Roy, the UN's peacekeeping chief, said he apologised to the government of Belarus on behalf of the UN for the erroneous report, which he called a "very bad incident for us".

Le Roy said the initial information about the helicopter deliveries from Belarus came from the independent experts who are monitoring sanctions. They receive intelligence from many sources. But he said: "UNOCI should not have reported that a plane has landed when it was clearly not true."

The report was issued after a week of intensified street fighting in the main city of Abidjan between forces loyal to Gbagbo and Ouattara, the widely acknowledged election winner, that left dozens dead.

The clashes led to a UN warning that the country was closer to the brink of reigniting civil war, a view backed by Le Roy.

Last week the UN said more than 300 people had died since the country's disputed November election, but that total does not include casualties from the most intense fighting, which could exceed 100. The UN refugee body estimates that 20,000 people fled the fighting in a single day last week, with the total now at about 130,000.

International radio stations, including the BBC, have been taken off air in what appears to be a renewed clampdown on foreign media.

Gbagbo's government has been cracking down on press loyal to Ouattara. Nine pro-Ouattara newspapers suspended publication on Tuesday after one of them was banned and three were fined for their coverage of police brutality last week.

Mohamed Keita, of the Committee to Protect Journalists, said: "It is becoming unbearably dangerous for media outlets and their journalists to operate in Ivory Coast as both Gbagbo and Ouattara camps exact reprisals on their critics in the press.

"We call on both sides to refrain from targeting the press or using politically motivated censorship."

Two reporters from the north have been detained by pro-Gbagbo security forces in Abidjan since late January.
source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/mar/03/ivory-coast-president-cuts-power-north

COFFEE AND COCOA FORECAST FOR TODAY & MARKET CLOSING REVIEW, 2 MAR 2011

U.S. cocoa futures rumbled to a strong close within sight of a 32-year high, recovering strongly one session after prices crashed more than 11 percent.

Brent crude edged closer to 2-1/2-year highs as Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi vowed to resist to the end a rebellion against his rule, and his top oil official warned of higher crude prices.

Sterling Smith, senior analyst for commodity brokerage Country Hedging Inc in Minnesota, said strong oil prices meant "more cane will be converted into ethanol and there will be less sugar for the market".

The cocoa market remained focused on top producer Ivory Coast, where youth supporters of incumbent Laurent Gbagbo rampaged through the business district of Abidjan on Tuesday, pillaging shops owned by foreigners.

"If there's a civil war then the (cocoa) price could go very much higher," said Gary Mead, an analyst at VM Group.

The market is weighing turmoil in Ivory Coast, which could disrupt supplies, and a forecast by the International Cocoa Organization that the global cocoa market will swing to surplus in the 2010/11 season due to rising output. [ID:nLDE7202HL]

New York's May cocoa contract rose $44 to close at $3,664 per tonne, shy of the 32-year settlement high at $3,695 and the intraday top of $3,712. Liffe's May cocoa contract added 21 pounds to finish at 2,346 pounds per tonne.

"Anyone who's short is ... fighting an incredible bull trend right now," said John Caruso, senior market strategist for brokerage Lind-Waldock in Chicago.

"You've got a lot of commodity and hedge funds that are speculating cocoa right now," he said.

Coffee futures were mixed, with arabicas losing steam after an early runup. New York's May arabica coffee futures rose 0.25 cent to trade at $2.6955 per lb. London's May robusta coffee fell $21 to conclude at $2,363 per tonne.

"I think the overall trend is higher. They're expecting very strong demand for coffee, no matter how high commodity prices go," Caruso said. source: https://portal.hpd.global.reuters.com/

Market close news: Liffe cocoa ends higher; robustas close down


    * Liffe May cocoa <LCCc2> ends up 21 pounds at 2,346 pounds  a tonne. Market is supported by violence in Ivory Coast as the  world's top grower moves closer to civil war.
    * Liffe May robusta coffee <LRCc2> ends down $21 at $2,363 a  tonne. Market supported by strength in arabicas market, which is  underpinned by a shortage of Colombian beans.
    * Liffe May white sugar <LSUc1> rose $27.10 to close at  $760.50 a tonne. Expectations of an ample centre/south Brazilian  sugar crop, due to be harvested soon, are a main focus of the  market.
source: https://portal.hpd.global.reuters.com/

NY sugar and cocoa finish strong, coffee dips

Raw sugar futures soared to close up nearly 4 percent on Wednesday, lifted in part by the strong crude oil market, while U.S. cocoa futures corrected higher.

RAW SUGAR
* The benchmark May raw sugar contract surged 1.12 cents, or 3.8 percent, to finish at 30.38 cents per lb.
 
* Analysts said surging oil prices, which would tempt top grower Brazil to use more cane to produce the alternate fuel ethanol, gave the sweetener a boost.
* "We're getting a little bit of a pop in from the oil market," said Sterling Smith, an analyst at brokers Country Hedging Inc in St. Paul, Minnesota.
* Traders said if more cane is used to churn out ethanol, it would further tighten supplies in the market.
* The tightness was underscored by news that merchant Czarnikow raised its forecast for a global sugar deficit in 2010/11 to 3.7 million tonnes. [ID:nLDE7202B0]
COFFEE
* May arabica coffee futures rose 0.25 cent to close at $2.6955 per lb, in an inside day.
* Market was quiet and choppy as tight supplies continued to underpin the market - dealers.
* May remained within sight of last week's 34-year high of $2.7840 per lb - traders.
* Indonesia's robusta coffee shipments from the main growing areas in Sumatra island nearly tripled last month versus a year ago as exporters turned to inventories to fulfill old contracts, but concerns over harvests persisted.
* Robusta coffee in Vietnam edged up nearly 1 percent in the past week to a fresh all-time high, but failed to stir up trading on both export and domestic markets. [ID:nL3E7E20A6]
COCOA
* Benchmark May cocoa futures rose $44 to finish at $3,664 per tonne, an inside day and within sight of Tuesday's intraday peak and 32-year high of $3,712.
 
* Quiet session of speculative buying following Tuesday's extremely volatile day when the market spiked lower, following a high-volume move lower on the exchange-traded note market, that resulted in some trades being canceled.
 
* May premium to July widened to $55, from $47 on Tuesday.
 
* Explosions rocked the southern Abidjan suburb of Koumassi overnight and on Wednesday, as fighting between insurgents seeking to oust Ivory Coast's Laurent Gbagbo and security forces spread to new areas of the main city.

* Concern about supplies, despite the widely expected global surplus, due to the export ban in top grower Ivory Coast, lifted the market - traders. 
source: https://portal.hpd.global.reuters.com/

Indonesia Feb coffee exports jump, stockpile drawn down


    * Exports nearly triple in Feb, exporters fullfil contracts
    * Weather affects quality, harvest uncertain
    * Early flowering prompted exporters not to sell forward  shipment
Indonesia's  robusta coffee shipments from the main growing areas in Sumatra  island nearly tripled last month versus a year ago as exporters  turned to inventories to fulfill old contracts, but  concerns  over harvests persisted.  
    Exporters shipped 17,504.98 tonnes in February, compared to  6,606.78 tonnes in the same month a year ago, trade data showed,  with rising prices in London futures also prompting more sales  from the world's second-largest robusta producer after Vietnam. 
    "Rallying coffee prices have prompted suppliers to sell  their coffee stocks," said Azis Chan Satib, a spokesman at the  Indonesia Coffee Association (AEKI).  
     Harvests in Sumatra usually start in March or April, but  farmers have been picking cherries since January as the  flowering season began earlier in some areas after the previous  crop ended last August. 
     As a result, many exporters refused to sell forward  shipment, preferring to sign nearby contracts to prevent  defaults. Exporters in the main growing province of Lampung  began to stock pile good-quality coffee last year, with beans  estimated at more than 100,000 tonnes in late 2010.  
    AEKI expects Indonesian coffee bean production to fall by 30  percent this year from an estimated 600,000 tonnes in 2010, as  rains in key producing areas damage cherries.
    Unseasonal heavy rains cut output of many commodities in  Indonesia last year or in early 2011, leaving coffee growers  unable to take advantage of a rally in coffee prices that took 
 London second-month robusta coffee futures <LRCc2> up 57 percent  in 2010 to end the year at $2,097 per tonne.
    EXTENDED RAINS 
    The prolonged rains resulted in Indonesian exports falling  28 percent last year. The country's exports last year fell to   247,750.34 tonnes, from 342,844.25 tonnes in 2009. 
    Robusta, used in instant coffee, mostly grows in Lampung,  Bengkulu, and South Sumatra provinces at the southern end of  Sumatra island and accounts for about 85 percent of Indonesia's  coffee  roduction. The rest is higher value, aromatic arabica  coffee. 
    Robusta has tracked rallies in premium arabica beans to  levels not seen in more than 30 years to stand at around 278  U.S. cents a pound. 
   The jump in February exports surprised some dealers, although  it also meant that inventories were being drawn down as the  current harvest yielded many black, and mouldy beans.  
    London's May robusta contract <LRCK1> fell $24 to $2,360 a  tonne in early trade on Wednesday.   
     "It is quite a surprise for me, because we tend to think  the coffee harvesting progress is not going well due to the  rainy season," said Ker Chung Yang, investment analyst at  Phillip Futures in Singapore. 
    "This is likely to weigh on the coffee prices, especially  robusta coffee, because this is a huge number. They (Indonesia)  are likely to export more at the moment because they want to  enjoy the higher coffee prices."  
    Indonesia competes with Vietnam, where stocks are falling  given a faster shipping pace so far in the October  2010/September 2011 harvesting season while the volume of  exportable beans may have fallen due to a higher ratio of  small-sized beans, traders said. 
    Robusta prices in Vietnam's domestic market jumped to a  record high in local currency terms on Tuesday to 46 million  dong ($2,205) a tonne, but exporters still found it difficult   to secure beans from growers who are holding back sales, traders said.
            Following are details of exports:   
    MONTH        2011             2010            Pct change  
                       (tonnes)           (tonnes)        (y/y)    
 January       17,589.10       6,740.40         +161       
 February     17,504.98       6,606.78         +165                
     
    Total        35,094.08       247,750.34       n/a   
source:  https://portal.hpd.global.reuters.com/

Forecast: Dry weather could cut Uganda's coffee output

   * Many coffee growing areas affected

   * Leaves might fall off and cherry may shrivel

Uganda's coffee output and its quality might fall in the next several months due to dry weather prevailing in many growing areas of the east African producer, an industry official said on Wednesday.

   David Muwonge, marketing and production manager of National Union of Coffee Agribusinesses and Farm Enterprises (NUCAFE) said coffee trees had started to show stress from the drought in most areas.

   Uganda, which primarily cultivates the robusta variety of the beans, is one of Africa's top coffee exporters and the commodity is a key source of foreign exchange for its economy, which is ranked the third biggest in east Africa.

   "In the south and southwestern Uganda the process of bean formation and development is on but some trees are clearly showing stress from persisting drought," Muwonge said.

   Both regions account for 45 percent of the country's total annual production. The state-run Uganda Coffee Development Authority (UCDA) forecasts the country will export 3.1 million 60-Kg bags of coffee in the 2010/2011 (Oct-Sep) season.

   "If this drought persists through March definitely these trees will start shedding leaves, some cherries will drop off while others might shrivel or become diseased," he said.

   The drought will also delay flowering in central and eastern parts of the country for the region's next crop. Harvest in both areas is currently winding down, he said.

   Uganda's bean exports fell by 18.6 percent to 215,180 bags in January compared with the same month last year due to the unfavourable weather.

source:  https://portal.hpd.global.reuters.com/