March NY world sugar #11 (SBH26) on Wednesday closed up +0.24 (+1.64%), and March London ICE white sugar #5 (SWH26) closed up +7.30 (+1.74%).
Sugar prices settled higher on Wednesday as dollar weakness (DXY00) sparked some short-covering in sugar futures.
Sugar prices have retreated over the past week, falling to 3-week lows on Tuesday due to ramped-up production in India and Brazil. Â Last Monday, the India Sugar Mill Association (ISMA) reported that Indian sugar production from Oct-Nov jumped +43% y/y to 4.11 MMT. Â The ISMA also reported that 428 sugar mills in India were crushing cane as of November 30, up from 376 a year ago.
The outlook for record sugar output in Brazil is also bearish for prices. Â Conab, Brazil’s crop forecasting agency, on November 4 raised its Brazil 2025/26 sugar production estimate to 45 MMT from a previous forecast of 44.5 MMT. Â Last Monday, Unica reported that Brazil’s Center-South sugar output in the first half of November rose by +8.7% y/y to 983 MT. Â Also, cumulative 2025-26 Center-South sugar output through mid-November rose by +2.1% y/y to 39.179 MMT.
On the bearish side for sugar, the International Sugar Organization (ISO) on November 17 forecast a 1.625 million MT sugar surplus in 2025-26, following a 2.916 million MT deficit in 2024-25. Â ISO said the surplus is being driven by increased sugar production in India, Thailand, and Pakistan. Â In August, ISO had previously forecast a 231,000 MT deficit for the 2025-26 marketing year. Â ISO is forecasting a +3.2% y/y rise in global sugar production to 181.8 million MT in 2025-26.
The outlook for robust global sugar supplies has hammered sugar prices since early October. Â On November 13, London sugar posted a 4.75-year nearest-futures low (SWZ25), and on November 6, NY sugar prices slumped to a 5-year nearest-futures low (SBH26), mainly due to higher sugar output in Brazil and talk of a global sugar surplus. Â Sugar trader Czarnikow on November 5 boosted its global 2025/26 sugar surplus estimate to 8.7 MMT, up +1.2 MMT from a September estimate of 7.5 MMT.
Signs of a larger sugar crop in India, the world’s second-largest producer, are undercutting prices after the India Sugar Mill Association (ISMA) on November 11 raised its 2025/26 India sugar production estimate to 31 MMT from an earlier forecast of 30 MMT, up +18.8% y/y. Â The ISMA also cut its estimate for sugar used for ethanol production in India to 3.4 MMT from a July forecast of 5 MMT, which may allow India to boost its sugar exports.


