Sugar Prices Rally with the Brazilian Real


March NY world sugar #11 (SBH26) today is up +0.08 (+0.56%), and May London ICE white sugar #5 (SWK26) is up +0.20 (+0.05%).

Sugar prices are moving higher today, with NY sugar posting a 2.5-week high and London sugar posting a 1.5-week high.  Strength in the Brazilian real (^USDBRL) is bullish for sugar prices.  The real jumped to a 1.75-year high against the dollar today, discouraging export sales from Brazil’s sugar producers.

Sugar prices also have positive carryover support from last Friday after the US Supreme Court struck down President Trump’s tariffs, potentially allowing Brazil to export more sugar to the US, which would shrink global supplies.

An excessive short position by funds in NY sugar futures could add fuel to a short-covering rally.  Last Friday’s weekly Commitment of Traders (COT) report showed funds boosted their short position in NY sugar futures and options by 14,381 to a record 265,324 net short positions (data from 2006).

Signs of lower sugar output in Brazil are also supportive of sugar prices, after Unica last Wednesday reported that sugar production in Brazil’s Center-South in the second half of January fell by 36% y/y to only 5,000 MT.  However, cumulative 2025-26 Center-South sugar output through January is up by +0.9% y/y to 40.24 MMT.  Also, the ratio of cane crushed for sugar rose to 50.74% in 2025/26 from 48.14% in 2024/25.

On February 12, sugar prices plunged to 5.25-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.

Consulting firm Safras & Mercado said on December 23 that Brazil’s sugar production in 2026/27 will fall by -3.91% to 41.8 MMT from 43.5 MMT expected in 2025/26.  The firm expects Brazil’s sugar exports in 2026/27 to fall by -11% y/y to 30 MMT.



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *