Sugar Prices Pressured by a Weak Brazilian Real

March NY world sugar #11 (SBH26) on Friday closed down -0.08 (-0.54%), and March London ICE white sugar #5 (SWH26) closed up +0.40 (+0.09%).

Sugar prices settled mixed on Friday, pressured by a weak Brazilian real.  The real (^USDBRL) fell to a 7-week low against the dollar on Friday, encouraging export sales from Brazil’s sugar producers.

Sugar prices were already on the defensive as they fell to 2-week lows on Monday amid India’s ramped-up sugar production.  The India Sugar Mill Association (ISMA) reported Monday that Indian sugar production from Oct-Nov jumped +43% y/y to 4.11 MMT.  The ISMA also reported that 428 sugar mills in India were crushing cane as of November 30, up from 376 a year ago.

The outlook for record sugar output in Brazil is also bearish for prices.  Conab, Brazil’s crop forecasting agency, on November 4 raised its Brazil 2025/26 sugar production estimate to 45 MMT from a previous forecast of 44.5 MMT.  On Monday, Unica reported that Brazil’s Center-South sugar output in the first half of November rose by +8.7% y/y to 983 MT.  Also, cumulative 2025-26 Center-South sugar output through mid-November rose by +2.1% y/y to 39.179 MMT.

Last Friday, sugar prices rallied to 6-week highs on concern about tighter global supplies.  Last Wednesday, StoneX cut its Brazil 2026/27 Center-South sugar production estimate to 41.5 MMT from a September estimate of 42.1 MMT.

Recent news that India’s food ministry is considering boosting the price of ethanol used for gasoline blending is bullish for sugar, as it could encourage India’s sugar mills to divert more cane crushing toward ethanol production rather than sugar, thereby reducing sugar supplies.

Sugar prices have support from November 14, when India’s food ministry said it would allow mills to export 1.5 MMT of sugar in the 2025/26 season, below earlier estimates of 2 MMT.  India introduced a quota system for sugar exports in 2022/23 after late rain reduced production and limited domestic supplies.

On the bearish side for sugar, the International Sugar Organization (ISO) on November 17 forecast a 1.625 million MT sugar surplus in 2025-26, following a 2.916 million MT deficit in 2024-25.  ISO said the surplus is being driven by increased sugar production in India, Thailand, and Pakistan.  In August, ISO had previously forecast a 231,000 MT deficit for the 2025-26 marketing year.  ISO is forecasting a +3.2% y/y rise in global sugar production to 181.8 million MT in 2025-26.

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