May NY world sugar #11 (SBK26) on Friday closed down -0.35 (-2.56%), and Aug London ICE white sugar #5 (SWQ26) closed down -6.00 (-1.43%).
Sugar prices retreated on Friday, with NY sugar falling to a 5.5-year nearest-futures low. Friday’s 12% plunge in crude oil prices (CLK26) hammered sugar prices. Lower crude prices undercut ethanol prices and could prompt global sugar millers to divert more cane crushing toward sugar production, thereby boosting sugar supplies.
Sugar prices also fell on Friday after Iran said the Strait of Hormuz is now reopened, which should restore normal shipping flows and ease global sugar supply concerns.
Sugar prices have been under pressure for the past two weeks amid expectations of abundant global supplies and tepid demand. Wednesday’s expiration of the May London sugar contract saw 472,650 MT of deliveries to settle the contract, the most for a May contract in 14 years, a sign of tepid sugar demand.
Higher sugar production in Brazil is bearish for sugar prices. On March 27, Unica reported that cumulative 2025-26 Center-South sugar output (October through mid-March) rose +0.7% y/y to 40.25 MMT, with sugar mills boosting the amount of cane crushed for sugar to 50.61% from 48.08% last year. On Friday, Conab, Brazil’s government forecasting agency, said that it expects 2025/26 Brazil sugar production of 44.196 MMT, up +0.1% y/y.
The outlook for the global sugar surplus to persist is weighing on prices. On February 11, analysts from sugar trader Czarnikow said they expect a global sugar surplus of 3.4 MMT in the 2026/27 crop year, following an 8.3 MMT surplus in 2025/26. Also, Green Pool Commodity Specialists said on January 29 that they expect a global sugar surplus of 2.74 MMT for 2025/26 and 156,000 MT for 2026/27. Meanwhile, StoneX said February 13 that it expects a global sugar surplus of 2.9 MMT in 2025/26.
The International Sugar Organization (ISO) on February 27 forecasted a +1.22 MMT (million metric ton) sugar surplus in 2025-26, following a -3.46 MMT deficit in 2024-25. ISO said the surplus is being driven by increased sugar production in India, Thailand, and Pakistan. ISO is forecasting a +3.0% y/y rise in global sugar production to 181.3 million MMT in 2025-26.

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