ICE Sugar No.11 Pullback Meets Emerging Supply Risks
Raw sugar futures on ICE No.11 correct lower, but weather and policy risks keep medium‑term sugar cane fundamentals tight. Concise market outlook in EUR.
Prices & Curve Structure
ICE No.11 raw sugar futures on 28 May 2026 closed lower along the entire strip. Front‑month Jul‑26 settled at 13.93 US‑ct/lb (≈€308/t), down 0.21 ct/lb (-1.51%) versus the previous day. Oct‑26 closed at 14.41 ct/lb (≈€318/t), while Mar‑27 finished at 15.28 ct/lb (≈€337/t). Further out, Mar‑28 and Mar‑29 remain above 16 ct/lb, underscoring the contango structure and a modest term premium for future supply risk.
The curve’s gentle upward slope is consistent with recent commentary that the current sell‑off reflects improved short‑term supply and speculative long liquidation rather than a fundamental collapse in demand. Recent daily reports classify current levels as four‑week lows, with open interest still elevated, leaving room for further position adjustments if macro risk sentiment deteriorates.
Supply & Demand Drivers
On the supply side, Brazil’s Center‑South sugarcane crush has started the 2026/27 cycle strongly. UNICA data for the second half of April show sugar output up over 100% year‑on‑year and cane crushing up more than 120%, exceeding market expectations. This early strength has reassured traders about near‑term availability of raw sugar for export, helping to cap prices despite earlier weather concerns.
However, policy and regional crop risks are counterbalancing this comfort. India has extended its ban on sugar exports until at least September 2026 to safeguard domestic supplies amid a weak monsoon outlook. At the same time, US market commentary points to weather‑related risks for the 2026 sugar beet crop and cautious buying, signalling that some key importing regions may face tighter local balances even if global availability looks comfortable.
Looking ahead to 2026/27, several analysts now expect a shift from a small surplus in 2025/26 to a modest global deficit as demand continues to edge higher. Lower expected output in the EU and UK, potential yield losses under developing El Niño conditions, and constrained export availability from India all support a structurally tighter medium‑term outlook, even if spot prices are currently under pressure.
Fundamentals & Physical Market
The contango between Jul‑26 (≈€308/t) and Mar‑29 (≈€364/t) implies that the market is willing to pay a premium for future supply security, consistent with expectations of a small deficit later in the decade. Current levels are only modestly below the mid‑May global price indices, indicating that the correction is notable but not yet a structural repricing of the sugar complex.
In the refined segment, Brazilian ICUMSA 45 offers FOB São Paulo around €0.53/kg underline that physical prices in EUR remain relatively firm versus the softening in USD‑denominated futures. This resilience suggests that freight, financing and regional tightness continue to support the physical market, and that the current paper market weakness may not fully translate into lower delivered sugar cane and refined sugar costs for end‑users.
Weather & Risk Outlook
Weather remains the key wild card for sugar cane. Probabilities for an El Niño pattern from late 2026 onward are now above 80%, raising risks of adverse rainfall patterns in major cane producers such as Brazil, India and Thailand. Even moderate yield impacts could matter given low stocks and a projected move into deficit, making markets highly sensitive to any negative crop headlines in the second half of 2026.
For the coming weeks, forecasts for Brazil’s Center‑South remain broadly favourable for crushing, supporting the strong start to the season. But traders will closely monitor the onset and distribution of India’s monsoon and any emerging dryness or excess rainfall signals in Southeast Asia that could reshape the 2026/27 balance.
Trading Outlook (1–4 weeks)
- Producers / Cane Millers: Use current Jul‑26 levels around €308/t to hedge a portion of Q3–Q4 2026 exports; retain upside via options given growing medium‑term deficit and weather risks.
- Industrial Buyers: Gradually build coverage on 2026/27 needs while futures remain near four‑week lows; focus on Oct‑26–Mar‑27 where contango remains moderate and physical premiums are still manageable.
- Speculative Traders: Short‑term trend remains fragile after the recent slide, but risk‑reward is shifting; consider scaling out of aggressive shorts and watching for weather‑ or policy‑driven reversal signals before adding new length.
3‑Day Price Indication (Direction, EUR)
- ICE No.11 Jul‑26 (raw, ~€308/t): Bias: sideways to slightly lower as funds adjust positions and Brazil’s strong crush keeps nearby supply ample.
- ICE No.11 Oct‑26 / Mar‑27 (≈€318–337/t): Bias: broadly sideways; contango likely to persist with modest steepening if further macro risk aversion hits commodities.
- Brazil refined ICUMSA 45 FOB (≈€530/t): Bias: stable; strong demand and logistics costs should keep EUR‑denominated refined prices supported despite softer raws.