ICE white sugar futures linked to the sugar beet sector eased on March 31, 2026, while remaining at historically firm levels, and Central European cash sugar prices in EUR show a broadly stable to slightly firmer pattern. Market attention is shifting from the end of the 2025/26 beet campaign towards sowing and weather risks for the 2026/27 crop.
After strong gains in March driven by global supply concerns, London ICE No. 5 contracts posted a modest correction of 0.3–0.9% across the curve on March 31, 2026, but prices from May 2026 to late 2028 remain clustered in a relatively tight and elevated USD 448–483/t range. At the same time, recent offers for granulated sugar in Poland, Czechia and Lithuania point to a stabilisation of regional physical prices around EUR 0.42–0.46/kg, supporting margins for beet processors and providing growers with a still-attractive beet price basis.
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📈 Prices & Term Structure
London ICE white sugar No. 5 futures (a key reference for beet sugar) closed lower on March 31, 2026: May 2026 at 448.50 USD/t (-0.85% day-on-day), August 2026 at 452.00 USD/t (-0.35%) and October 2026 at 455.40 USD/t (-0.48%). Further out, contracts for 2027–2028 also slipped by around 0.5–0.6% but hold between 460 and 483 USD/t, indicating only a mild contango and a market that still prices in tight fundamentals.
In the EU physical market, latest FCA offers (as of March 30, 2026) show granulated sugar in Poland and Czechia mostly at EUR 0.42/kg for EU Cat. II product, with premium Icumsa-45 sugar in Warsaw at about EUR 0.46/kg. Compared with mid-March, Polish prices edged up by around EUR 0.01/kg, while Lithuanian Icumsa-45 sugar remained steady at roughly EUR 0.44/kg, signalling consolidation rather than a renewed rally.
| Product / Contract | Region | Latest Price (EUR) | Move vs. Prev. |
|---|---|---|---|
| ICE White Sugar No.5 May 2026* | Global (EUR/t, approx.) | ≈ 415–420 EUR/t | slightly lower d/d |
| Granulated sugar EU Cat. II | PL, Kalisz (FCA) | 0.42 EUR/kg | +0.01 EUR/kg |
| Granulated sugar EU Cat. II | CZ origin, PL Kalisz (FCA) | 0.42 EUR/kg | stable |
| Granulated sugar Icumsa-45 | PL, Warsaw (FCA) | 0.46 EUR/kg | stable |
*Converted from USD using an indicative FX rate; for orientation only.
🌍 Supply, Demand & Crop Outlook
Global sugar fundamentals remain shaped by strong Brazilian cane output and expectations of a moderate global surplus in 2025/26 and 2026/27, even as short-term weather issues in Brazil and India have kept futures volatile. Recent commentary from international analysts continues to point to small but positive surpluses, which caps upside on the white sugar curve despite brisk speculative activity.
For Europe, the 2025/26 sugar beet campaign has largely concluded with generally solid yields in key EU and UK regions, providing a comfortable starting stock position into the new season. Market outlooks project a stable to slightly lower beet area around 1.45 million hectares in the EU over the coming years, reflecting competition from alternative crops and policy constraints, but efficiency gains and high-yield varieties continue to underpin output.
🌦️ Weather & Planting Conditions
Weather is now the main short-term variable for the sugar beet market as European farmers prepare for 2026 sowings. Early-year maps indicate ample rainfall across much of western and central Europe, including parts of France, Germany and Poland, reducing immediate drought concerns that plagued some past seasons, but raising local risks of waterlogging and delayed fieldwork where soils are saturated.
Medium-range European precipitation forecasts for late March and April 2026 suggest a continued wet signal from southern France through the Alps and the Balkans, with comparatively lighter totals toward eastern Europe. This pattern would favour beet emergence in well-drained areas but could complicate sowing in heavier soils. For now, weather is broadly neutral-to-slightly supportive for EU beet yield potential, but any shift toward prolonged dryness in late spring would quickly become a key market focus.
📊 Fundamentals & Margin Perspective
The current combination of firm but slightly softer white sugar futures and steady Central European cash prices leaves processor and grower margins still relatively attractive. With FCA prices around EUR 0.42–0.46/kg and futures near the equivalent of just over 400 EUR/t, the beet value chain in Poland, Czechia and Lithuania remains well supported compared with pre-2023 levels. This encourages stable beet planting, even if some competition from oilseeds and cereals persists.
On the demand side, structural consumption of caloric sweeteners in food processing continues to grow modestly, particularly in developed markets where sugar remains difficult to fully substitute in many applications. This underpins medium-term demand for beet sugar despite ongoing health and sustainability debates and some gradual penetration of sugar alternatives and sugar alcohols.
📆 Trading Outlook & 3-Day View
- Producers / Beet Growers: Consider forward-selling a portion of expected 2026/27 beet-based sugar output against current ICE No. 5 levels, which still price in relatively tight balances, while keeping some volume open in case of weather-driven rallies.
- Industrial Buyers: With regional FCA prices consolidating, it is reasonable to extend coverage modestly into Q2–Q3 2026, but avoid over-coverage given global surplus expectations that could limit upside later in the year.
- Traders: Look for range-bound trading in white sugar futures near current levels, with weather headlines in Europe and Brazil offering short-term directional cues; spreads along the No. 5 curve reflect only mild carry and may stay relatively flat absent a major shock.
3-day directional outlook (EUR perspective): White sugar futures are likely to trade slightly firmer to sideways as markets digest the recent pullback and watch early spring weather. Central European cash prices should remain stable in the very short term, with any move mainly linked to FX swings rather than local fundamentals.








