India’s Export Pullback Reshapes Global Sugar Balance as Prices Soften
India’s sugar exports set to fall below 0.8 Mt in 2025-26 as weak global prices curb shipments. Impact on world balance, EU prices and trading strategy.
Prices & Futures
Global sugar benchmarks are mixed to slightly firmer but still relatively weak in historical terms. Nearby London white sugar futures have been trading in the low‑ to mid‑440 USD/t range this week, with recent closes around 440–448 USD/t, reflecting modest daily gains of less than 1% on most sessions.
Converted at roughly 1.10 USD/EUR, this implies a London white sugar reference area of approximately 0.40–0.42 EUR/kg, broadly aligned with current wholesale offers in Europe. Recent FCA offers for refined granulated sugar stand around 0.44–0.47 EUR/kg in Central and Eastern Europe, with Germany somewhat higher near 0.58 EUR/kg, pointing to comfortable availability and only moderate producer pricing power.
Supply & Demand Shifts
India, the world’s second-largest producer, has seen domestic sugar production recover to about 27.5 million tonnes so far in 2025-26, with full-season output projected at 28.2 million tonnes versus 26.1 million tonnes in 2024-25. This marks a moderate supply rebound but not a return to the very ample surpluses of earlier years.
Despite this higher production, India’s export performance is lagging sharply behind policy allowances. The Food Ministry authorised up to 2 million tonnes of exports (an initial 1.5 million tonnes plus a 0.5 million tonne pool), yet actual shipments are expected to reach only 750,000–800,000 tonnes. Around 500,000 tonnes had been shipped by early March, and the remainder of the quota is unlikely to be used before the season ends in September.
This leaves roughly 1.2 million tonnes of theoretically available export volume stranded in India. The main reason is unfavourable global price parity: at today’s international prices, mills cannot cover domestic procurement and logistics costs, so they are choosing to sell domestically instead of exporting at a loss. Domestic consumption growth has also stagnated, subtly tightening the surplus and reinforcing mills’ preference to sit on quota rather than ship aggressively.
Policy, Trade Flows & Global Context
India’s quota-based export regime plays a pivotal role in how these market forces translate into trade flows. While the government has permitted up to 2 million tonnes, the volumes are tightly allocated across mills, and operators cannot exceed their individual share. This structure ensures broad participation when exports are profitable but also limits the ability of competitive mills to compensate for neighbours who choose not to export.
For the current 2025-26 season, mill behaviour is clearly price-driven rather than policy-constrained. The lack of uptake from the supplementary 500,000-tonne pool — of which only about 87,600 tonnes were actually approved for shipment — underlines the absence of commercial incentive at prevailing world prices. In parallel, the government’s separate export ban announced on 14 May injects additional uncertainty over how and when India might re-emerge as a flexible exporter beyond tightly controlled channels in coming seasons.
Globally, Brazil remains the dominant origin for raw and white sugar, while India’s retrenchment removes a key nearby source for buyers in Asia and the Middle East. Yet London white sugar futures have only firmed modestly, suggesting that Brazilian availability, existing stocks and softer consumption narratives (including demand risks from health and weight-loss trends) are offsetting the bullish impact of India’s pullback. Nearby ICE raw sugar contracts around the mid-teens USc/lb confirm a market that is weak but not collapsing.
Outlook & Key Watch Points
For the remainder of 2025-26, India’s export total is effectively capped near 750,000–800,000 tonnes unless there is a sharp and sustained rally in global prices before September. Given current London white sugar levels and only modest strength in ICE raw sugar, such a breakout looks unlikely in the very short term. The export ban announced in mid-May further reinforces the downside cap on Indian shipments beyond quota-based flows.
Over the next 30–90 days, key indicators include London No.5 futures performance, any formal revision of India’s export framework, and realised shipments against already-approved quotas. For 2026-27, the balance will hinge on new-crop production in India and Brazil, domestic Indian demand trends, and whether global prices recover enough to restore export parity for Indian mills. Weather risks in Centre-South Brazil and India’s cane belt will become more important as the next crushing seasons approach, but near-term fundamentals remain defined by policy and price parity rather than agronomic stress.
Trading & Procurement Strategy
- EU buyers: With EU FCA prices around 0.44–0.47 EUR/kg (and Germany higher), consider layering in short- to medium-term coverage while London No.5 remains near 0.40–0.42 EUR/kg equivalent. The risk of a sudden India-driven rally appears limited in the next few months.
- Industrial users in MENA/Asia: India’s reduced export presence means greater reliance on Brazilian and other origins. Diversify origins and secure logistics early, especially given ongoing freight and geopolitical uncertainties.
- Producers and refiners: Use any further dips in London No.5 and ICE raw sugar to build incremental hedges for 2026-27. With India’s policy stance opaque, the medium-term balance could tighten quickly if weather or policy shocks converge.
3-Day Directional Outlook (EUR-based)
- London white sugar No.5: Slightly firmer to sideways in EUR terms, tracking small USD gains and FX noise.
- EU physical refined (FCA, Central/Eastern Europe): Broadly stable around 0.44–0.47 EUR/kg as supply remains comfortable.
- Premium markets (e.g. Germany FCA): Stable to marginally firm near 0.58 EUR/kg, supported by local cost structures rather than tight physical balance.