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HomeFinanceSugar Prices Recover as Crude Oil Strength Spurs Short Covering

Sugar Prices Recover as Crude Oil Strength Spurs Short Covering

October NY world sugar #11 (SBV25) today is up +0.23 (+1.51%), and December London ICE white sugar #5 (SWZ25) is up +8.40 (+1.86%).

Sugar prices recovered from early losses today and moved sharply higher after a +2% rally in crude oil prices (CLX25) sparked short covering in sugar futures.  Stronger crude prices benefit ethanol prices and could prompt global sugar mills to divert more cane crushing toward ethanol production rather than sugar, thus curbing sugar supplies.

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Sugar price initially moved lower today,  NY sugar posting a 4.25-year nearest-futures low and London sugar posting a new 4-year low.   Sugar prices have been declining over the past six months, driven by signs of abundant global sugar supplies.  StoneX today projected a global sugar surplus of +2.8 MMT for the upcoming 2025/26 season, switching from a deficit of -4.7 MMT in the 2024/25 season.

Higher sugar output in Brazil is negative for prices.  Last Wednesday, Unica reported that Brazil’s Center-South sugar output in the second half of August rose by +18% y/y to 3.872 MT.  Also, the percentage of sugarcane crushed for sugar by Brazil’s sugar mills in the second half of August increased to 54.20% from 48.78% the same time last year.  However, cumulative 2025-26 Center-South sugar output through August fell -1.9% y/y to 26.758 MMT.

Another bearish factor for sugar was last Tuesday’s assertion from sugar trader Sucden that India may divert 4 MMT of sugar to make ethanol in 2025/26, which is not enough to ease the country’s sugar surplus and may prompt India’s sugar mills to export as much as 4 MMT of sugar, above earlier expectations of 2 MMT.  India is the world’s second-largest sugar producer.

On August 29, the International Sugar Organization (ISO) forecast a global sugar deficit for the 2025/26 season, the sixth consecutive year of sugar deficits.  The ISO projects a global 2025/26 sugar deficit of -231,000 MT, improving from a -4.88 MMT shortfall in 2024/25.  The ISO also projects 2025/26 global sugar production will rise by +3.3% y/y to 180.6 MMT, and 2025/26 global sugar consumption will increase +0.3% y/y to 180.8 MMT.

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