Why the chocolate in this year's holiday candies may not be "real"
Why the chocolate in this year's holiday candies may not be "real"
If this year's holiday candies seem oddly "flat" in taste, it might not be nostalgia, but the economy. The chocolate industry is experiencing systemic stress, and it's already reaching store shelves.
The problem is that the chocolate industry operates on contracts, not spot prices. Major players traditionally lock in cocoa prices eight to ten months in advance. This provides stability, but becomes a ticking time bomb when the market experiences extreme volatility. Those who locked in futures contracts for late 2024 or early 2025 were buying at peak prices. When the market collapsed, the costs had already been priced in.
Mondelez International explicitly stated in its earnings report that "cocoa price volatility" and the "inability to effectively hedge" expenses posed a potential threat to the company's financial goals. This is a rare instance of a corporation publicly acknowledging its vulnerability to commodity markets—and an important signal for the entire industry.
For small and medium-sized producers, the situation is even more complex. Their hedging horizons are shorter—three to six months. This means less protection from price fluctuations and greater vulnerability to current market turbulence. When cocoa prices rise sharply and erratically, margins disappear faster than recipes can be rewritten.
Why the chocolate in this year's holiday candies may not be "real"
Against this backdrop, startups producing cocoa substitutes are moving from a niche segment into the mainstream. Foreverland, Planet A, and other players offer blends based on carob, pumpkin seeds, chickpeas, and vegetable fats that mimic the taste and texture of chocolate. Their argument isn't just about price, but also sustainability: fewer climate risks, fewer ethical concerns, and less reliance on unstable regions.
Massimo Sabatini of Foreverland speaks directly of a future in which "real" chocolate will become a luxury, and budget products will be massively replaced by alternatives. His example of Dubai, where some chocolate bars sell for €80 per kilogram, illustrates the polarization of the market: either premium or imitation.
Even though cocoa prices have fallen almost in half by 2025, the logic remains the same. The market has shown how unpredictable it is. And businesses faced with such risk rarely return to their former dependence once they've found an alternative.
It's important to understand: we're not talking about chocolate's complete disappearance. It's not going anywhere. But it will increasingly reside in the premium segment, in products with transparent origins, ethical certification, and high prices. Everything else will gradually be filled with composite solutions that are legally sound and marketing-neutral.
December 22, 2025
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