Has Sugar Been Artificially Sweetened by War in Iran?

Have recent events – the US-Iran “War”, strength of the Brazilian real, etc. – broken the sugar market out of its long-term downtrend? If sugar is to see a change in trend it will likely be due to funds starting to cover some of the record large short futures position. Fundamentally, the market’s forward curve…


Has Sugar Been Artificially Sweetened by War in Iran?
Has Sugar Been Artificially Sweetened by War in Iran?
  1. Have recent events – the US-Iran “War”, strength of the Brazilian real, etc. – broken the sugar market out of its long-term downtrend?

  2. If sugar is to see a change in trend it will likely be due to funds starting to cover some of the record large short futures position.

  3. Fundamentally, the market’s forward curve remains in contango, indicating no short supply scare at this time.

Earlier this week, a long-time friend in the media reached out with an email asking about markets tied to the US-Iran War. Knowing my friend, I could read the fatigue in her email, “I haven’t had time to look at much else besides oil and gold, but what’s all this I’m hearing about sugar prices going up because of the US-Iran conflict?” She followed with, “Do you have any insight into why sugar prices have rallied? Is there a supply shortage? Or is the Middle East of particular concern when it comes to sugar supply and demand?”

As always, I thanked my friend for breaking me out of the rut I get myself in with corn/soybeans and gold/silver. It’s refreshing to think about other markets occasionally, even if gold and crude oil are the two main stories in commodities at this point.

Let’s put the pieces of the sugar market together and see what we see, staring with the weekly close-only chart for the nearby No. 11 futures (SBK26) chart. Let’s block out all the noise and focus on one thing: The trend – price direction over time. What I see is as clear of a downtrend as we will find almost anywhere. It’s interesting to note the market posted a high weekly close the week of Halloween 2023, the nearby futures contract priced at 27.77 (cents per pound). As of the close on Wednesday, March 4, 2026, the nearby contract is priced at 13.73 meaning the market has lost just over 50% of its value.

Has the market rallied since the US launched its against Iran at the end of February? For the week the nearby May contract is down 0.16. As far as I’m concerned, the trend of the market is still down, fitting with Newton’s First Law of Motion applied to markets: A trending market will stay in that trend until acted upon by an outside force. And that force is usually the flow of noncommercial money.

The most recent CFTC Commitments of Traders report (legacy, futures only) showed a noncommercial net-short futures position of 246,123 contracts as of Tuesday, February 24. This was a decrease of 7,469 contracts from the previous week record net-short futures position of 253,592 contracts. For the record, the noncommercial futures position the week of October 30, 2023, was a net-long of 213,589 contracts meaning funds have flipped their position by 467,181 contracts. Almost a half-million contracts. That is substantial.

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