Sugar Prices Slide as Crude Oil Plunges: USA
Sugar prices fell to two-week lows, driven by a sharp decline in crude oil prices and forecasts of favorable weather in Brazil. Lower crude prices reduce ethanol demand, pushing more sugarcane towards sugar production. Optimism about a strong Indian monsoon and increased sugar output in Brazil added to the pressure. Despite recent drought and fire damage in Brazil, global sugar production is expected to rise.
October NY world sugar #11 (SBV24) today is down -0.32 (-1.70%), and Oct London ICE white sugar #5 (SWV24) is down -6.00 (-1.14%).
Sugar prices today added to Monday’s losses and posted 2-week lows. Today’s -4% selloff in WTI crude oil (CLV24) to a 16-month low is weighing on sugar prices. Weaker crude oil prices undercut ethanol prices and may prompt the world’s sugar mills to divert more cane crushing to sugar production rather than ethanol, thus boosting sugar supplies.
Losses in sugar accelerated today when Maxar Technologies forecasted that showers will pass over the southern portions of Center-South Brazil in the next six to ten days, which should benefit Brazil’s sugar crops.
Sugar prices are also under pressure on optimism that above-average monsoon rains in India will lead to a bumper sugar crop. The Indian Meteorological Department reported last Thursday that India received 792.5 mm of rain during the current monsoon season as of September 5, or 8% more than the comparable long-term average of 734.8 mm. India’s monsoon season runs from June through September.
Also, increased sugar production in Brazil is a negative factor for sugar prices. Unica reported on August 28 that in the 2024/25 marketing year through mid-August, Brazil’s Center-South sugar production was up by +5.4% y/y to 23.91 MMT.
Late last month, sugar prices rallied to 2-month highs as drought and excessive heat caused massive fires in Brazil that have damaged sugar crops in Brazil’s top sugar-producing state of Sao Paulo. Sugar cane industry group Orplana said that as many as 2,000 fire outbreaks affected up to 80,000 hectares of planted sugarcane in Sao Paulo. Green Pool Commodity Specialists said that as much as 5 MMT of sugar cane may have been lost due to the fires. Also, Czarnikow cut its Brazil Center-South 2024/25 sugar production estimate to 39.2 MMT from 40.0 MMT last Tuesday due to drought and fire damage. In addition, Covrig Analytics raised its 2024/25 global sugar deficit estimate last Tuesday to -600,000 MT from a previous estimate of -300,000 MT.
In a supportive factor for sugar prices, the International Sugar Organization (ISO) on August 30 forecasted a 2024/25 global sugar deficit of -3.58 MMT, much larger than the estimated -200,000 MT deficit for 2023/24. ISO forecasted 2024/25 global sugar production of 179.3 MMT, down -1.1% y/y from 181.3 MMT in 2023/24.
Meanwhile, Conab, Brazil’s government crop forecasting agency, cut its 2024/25 Brazil Center South sugar production estimate on August 22 to 42 MMT from a previous forecast of 42.7 MMT, citing lower sugarcane yields due to drought and excessive heat.
In another supportive factor for sugar prices, India’s Food Ministry on August 30 lifted restrictions on sugar mills producing ethanol for the 2024/25 year that starts November, which may prolong India’s sugar export curbs. Last December, India ordered sugar mills to stop using sugarcane to produce ethanol for the 2023/24 supply year to boost its sugar reserves. India has restricted sugar exports since October 2023 to maintain adequate domestic supplies. India allowed mills to export only 6.1 MMT of sugar during the 2022/23 season to September 30 after allowing exports of a record 11.1 MMT in the previous season.
The Indian Sugar and Bio-energy Manufacturers Association (ISM) on July 3 reported India’s 2023/24 sugar reserves at 9.1 MMT and reported a surplus of 3.6 MMT. Separately, the ISM reported on May 13 that India’s 2023/24 sugar production from Oct-Apr fell -1.6% y/y to 31.4 MMT. Also, the ISM on July 30 projected India’s 2024/25 sugar production would fall by -2% y/y to 33.31 MMT.
Record heat in Thailand that may damage the country’s sugarcane crops is bullish for sugar prices. On May 6, Thailand’s Meteorological Department said that more than three dozen of Thailand’s 77 provinces posted record-high temperatures in April, with new highs beating records as far back as 1958. Sugar millers in Thailand are reporting the lowest yield from crushed cane this year in at least 13 years. However, Thailand’s government on April 22 estimated that Thailand’s 2023/24 sugar production from Dec-Apr 17 was 8.77 MMT, above a Feb estimate from the Thai Sugar Millers Corp for sugar production of 7.5 MMT. Thailand is the world’s third-largest sugar producer and the second-largest sugar exporter.
The USDA, in its bi-annual report released on May 23, projected that global 2024/25 sugar production would climb +1.4% y/y to a record 186.024 MMT and that global 2024/25 human sugar consumption would increase +0.8% y/y to a record 178.788 MMT. The USDA forecasted that 2024/25 global sugar ending stocks would fall -4.7% y/y to a 13-year low of 38.339 MMT.
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