May NY world sugar #11 (SBK26) today is down -0.14 (-0.89%), and May London ICE white sugar #5 (SWK26) is down -5.30 (-1.16%).
Sugar prices gave up an early advance today and turned lower after a rally in the dollar index ($DXY) to a 10.5-month high sparked long liquidation in sugar futures.
Sugar prices are also under pressure on negative carryover from last Friday amid higher sugar production in Brazil, as sugar mills divert more cane crushing toward sugar output rather than ethanol. Unica reported last Friday that cumulative 2025-26 Center-South sugar output (October through mid-March) is up +0.7% y/y to 40.25 MMT, with sugar mills boosting the amount of cane crushed for sugar to 50.61% from 48.08% last year.
Sugar prices initially moved higher today, with NY sugar posting a 5.5-month high and London sugar posting a 6-month high, driven by strength in crude oil prices (CLK26). Crude oil is up by more than 3% today, boosting ethanol prices and may encourage the world’s sugar mills to increase ethanol production and curb sugar output.
Sugar prices also have some support amid supply disruptions from the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. According to Covrig Analytics, the closure of the strait has curbed approximately 6% of the world’s sugar trade, constraining refined sugar output.
Earlier this month, sugar prices plunged to 5.5-year nearest-futures lows on concern that a global sugar surplus will persist. On February 11, analysts from sugar trader Czarnikow said they expect a global sugar surplus of 3.4 MMT in the 2026/27 crop year, following an 8.3 MMT surplus in 2025/26. Also, Green Pool Commodity Specialists said on January 29 that they expect a 2.74 MMT global sugar surplus for 2025/26 and a 156,000 MT surplus for 2026/27. Meanwhile, StoneX said February 13 that it expects a global sugar surplus of 2.9 MMT in 2025/26.
The International Sugar Organization (ISO) on February 27 forecasted a +1.22 MMT (million metric ton) sugar surplus in 2025-26, following a -3.46 MMT deficit in 2024-25. ISO said the surplus is being driven by increased sugar production in India, Thailand, and Pakistan. ISO is forecasting a +3.0% y/y rise in global sugar production to 181.3 million MMT in 2025-26.
finance.yahoo.com
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