ED&F Man sees second year of sugar surplus on Europe, India crops

epa06343807 (FILE) - A Filipino customs officer inspects confiscated sugar found in a container at the Port of Manila, Philippines, 01 October 2015 (reissued 22 November 2017). According to reports from 22 November 2017, researchers from the University of California are alleging that the sugar industry has for 50 years withheld evidence on the negative effects of sucrose. Industry bodies deny the researcher's findings.  EPA-EFE/MARK R. CRISTINO

Bloomberg

Good crops in Europe and India will probably extend a global sugar surplus for a second year, according to
ED&F Man Holdings Ltd.
Supplies are likely to outpace demand again in the season that starts in October, Kona Haque, head of research at the London-based trader, said in an interview before the Dubai Sugar
Conference. That follows a glut of about 7 million to 8 million metric tons in 2017-18.
Sugar processors in the European Union have already signed contracts with beet farmers and the cane that will be cut for the next Indian crop is already in the ground, she said. Traders will be closely watching forecasts for next season as prices have already tumbled 36 percent over the past year.
“The EU beet crop should be big again, the same with India,” Haque said in London. “It’s only in 2019-20 that we don’t know what either the EU beet farmers are going to do or what the Indian crop is going to be like.”
EU producers boosted output this season as regulators liberalised the market and exports from the 28 member nations look on track to exceed 3 million tons, according to ED&F Man.
In India, higher yields and better weather have prompted the trader
to raise its forecast for 2017-18
by 500,000 tons to 27 million tons, Haque said.
Higher ethanol prices will prompt some millers in top producer Brazil to switch to the biofuel in the 2018-19 season that starts there in April. While that will help the market, it would not be enough to offset the surplus elsewhere, she said.
ED&F Man expects sugar production in Brazil’s main producing region to drop by about 3 million tons.
Another surplus doesn’t necessarily mean two years of falling prices, Haque said.
The economic environment is favourable and the commodities market has already seen the positive impact of global growth and a weak dollar on energy and metals. The position that hedge funds take will also influence prices.
“What I’m saying is that it doesn’t necessarily mean we are going to be bearish for the next two years,” she said. “If 2019 turns, the funds will start anticipating that well ahead.”

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