Sugar Prices Fall to Lowest Levels in More Than 4 Years

March NY world sugar #11 (SBH26) on Friday closed down -0.32 (-2.09%), and December London ICE white sugar #5 (SWZ25) is closed down -6.50 (-1.48%).

Sugar prices on Friday reverted to weakness, with NY sugar falling to a new 4.5-year low and London sugar falling to a new 4.25-year low.  Sugar prices on Thursday earlier staged a temporary recovery when crude oil prices rallied on new US and EU oil sanctions on Russia.  Higher crude oil prices benefit ethanol prices and could prompt the world’s sugar mills to divert more cane crushing toward ethanol production rather than sugar, thus curbing sugar supplies.

Sugar prices have been under pressure over the past seven months, mainly due to signs of higher sugar output in Brazil.  Unica reported last Thursday that Brazil’s Center-South sugar output in the second half of September rose by +10.8% y/y to 3.137 MT.  Also, the percentage of sugarcane crushed for sugar by Brazil’s sugar mills in the second half of September increased to 51.17% from 47.73% the same time last year.  In addition, cumulative 2025-26 Center-South sugar output through September rose +0.8% y/y to 33.524 MMT.  Separately, consultant Datagro on Tuesday projected that Brazil’s Center-South 2026/27 sugar production will climb +3.9% y/y to a record 44 MMT.

The outlook for robust global sugar supplies is also weighing on prices.  Last Monday, BMI Group projected a global 2025/26 sugar surplus of 10.5 MMT.  Last Tuesday, Covrig Analytics projected a global 2025/25 sugar surplus of 4.1 MMT.

The outlook for higher sugar exports from India is negative for sugar prices, as abundant monsoon rains may produce a bumper sugar crop.  On September 30, India’s Meteorological Department reported that cumulative monsoon rainfall as of that date was 937.2 mm, 8% above normal, marking the strongest monsoon in five years.  On June 2, India’s National Federation of Cooperative Sugar Factories projected that India’s 2025/26 sugar production would climb +19% y/y to 34.9 MMT, citing larger planted cane acreage.  That would follow a -17.5% y/y decline in India’s sugar production in 2024/25 to a 5-year low of 26.2 MMT, according to the Indian Sugar Mills Association (ISMA).

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