Sugar #11 Slips to Multi‑Year Lows as Energy and Oversupply Weigh

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ICE raw sugar #11 futures extended their slide, with the May 2026 contract settling around the low‑13 US¢/lb area on 17 April, marking a pronounced day‑on‑day decline and reinforcing a bearish short‑term tone. The entire forward curve eased, though outer maturities still hold a modest premium, signaling expectations of only gradual recovery.

After several weeks of choppy, range‑bound trade, the sugar market has broken lower in mid‑April. Front‑month May 2026 futures fell from 13.66 to 13.31 US¢/lb on 17 April, a drop of 2.6%, dragging nearby contracts with them. The curve remains upward‑sloping from May 2026 into early 2029, but the premium has narrowed as selling pressure intensified alongside a sharp correction in crude oil and renewed talk of ample global supplies. At the same time, refined sugar export offers from Brazil remain relatively firm in euro terms, cushioning margins for efficient producers and limiting downside appetite among some sellers.

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📈 Prices & Term Structure

The latest ICE Sugar No.11 board (17 April 2026) shows a broad, synchronized decline across maturities. May 2026 settled at 13.31 US¢/lb (‑0.35), July 2026 at 13.48 US¢/lb (‑0.32) and October 2026 at 13.90 US¢/lb (‑0.30). Further out, March 2027 closed at 14.69 US¢/lb, while March 2028 and March 2029 finished at 15.60 and 16.19 US¢/lb respectively. The structure is still in carry, but the curve is relatively flat between mid‑2026 and mid‑2027, pointing to comfortable medium‑term supply.

Recent external commentary confirms that New York raw sugar has retreated to multi‑year lows near the mid‑teens, with Friday’s sell‑off linked to a steep fall in crude oil prices, which undermined ethanol values and encouraged expectations of higher sugar output from cane. Market liquidity remains concentrated in the May and July 2026 contracts, as reflected by high daily volumes above 100,000 lots in July.

Contract Settlement (US¢/lb) Approx. EUR/mt* Change vs. prior day
May 2026 13.31 ≈ 267 EUR/mt -0.35
Jul 2026 13.48 ≈ 270 EUR/mt -0.32
Oct 2026 13.90 ≈ 279 EUR/mt -0.30
Mar 2027 14.69 ≈ 295 EUR/mt -0.29

*Indicative conversion assuming 1 US¢/lb ≈ 20.05 EUR/mt at current FX levels; rounded.

🌍 Supply & Demand Drivers

The price slide is being driven primarily by perceptions of ample global availability. The latest sell‑off coincided with a roughly 12% plunge in crude oil, which reduces the economic incentive for Brazilian mills to divert cane to ethanol and instead favors higher crystallized sugar output. This dynamic adds bearish pressure to the raw sugar balance at a time when demand growth is relatively steady but not spectacular.

Forward prices in the 2027–2028 window remain above 15 US¢/lb, suggesting that while current levels are testing the lower end of many producers’ cost curves, the market still anticipates only a moderate tightening later in the decade rather than an acute shortage. In physical markets, Brazilian refined ICUMSA 45 FOB São Paulo is indicated around 0.53 EUR/kg, up slightly versus late 2024 levels and implying that white sugar premiums and logistics costs are partly insulating refined prices from the recent futures drop.

📊 Fundamentals & Producer Margins

With front‑month ICE #11 hovering near the low‑to‑mid‑teens, some higher‑cost origins may be approaching breakeven, especially once freight and financing are factored in. However, high‑efficiency Brazilian exporters still appear competitive, particularly in refined grades where FOB offers in euros have trended gently higher over recent months. This supports continued strong export flows from Brazil and reinforces the bearish tone for raw sugar futures.

The modest contango between May 2026 and March 2029, increasing from about 13.3 to just over 16 US¢/lb, is consistent with a market that is neither acutely oversupplied nor structurally tight. It offers limited carry for storage but enough incentive for trade houses and producers to roll hedges along the curve rather than aggressively lifting coverage at current lows.

🌦 Weather & Regional Outlook

In the short term, there are no major weather shocks reported over the last few days in key cane regions that would offset the bearish impact from energy markets and supply expectations. Recent market commentary continues to focus far more on macro‑drivers such as crude oil and currencies than on immediate weather threats to Center‑South Brazil or Asian producers. Nonetheless, participants should monitor the upcoming Brazilian crush and any early‑season rainfall anomalies, as these could quickly reprice later‑dated contracts.

📆 3‑Day Market & Trading Outlook

  • Bias: Short‑term tone remains cautiously bearish to sideways after the sharp break, with potential for technical consolidation above recent lows.
  • Producers: Consider layering in hedges on bounces for 2026/27 output, using the still‑positive carry into 2027–2028 to smooth pricing, while avoiding over‑hedging if costs are close to current futures levels.
  • Buyers: End‑users with uncovered Q3–Q4 2026 needs may look to secure partial coverage near current levels, keeping some flexibility in case macro‑driven liquidation pushes prices briefly lower.
  • Speculators: Short positions should be managed actively; with prices near multi‑year lows, the risk‑reward is shifting toward a more balanced stance, favoring tight stops on fresh shorts.

Indicative 3‑Day Direction (EUR, converted from futures):

  • ICE #11 May 2026 (front month): Slightly bearish to neutral around ≈ 265–275 EUR/mt.
  • ICE #11 Oct 2026: Mildly softer but expected to hold a small premium vs. May in the 275–285 EUR/mt area.
  • Long‑dated (Mar 2028–Mar 2029): Sideways; curve likely to retain moderate carry unless a new fundamental catalyst emerges.

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