Sugar: Indicators Point To A Surge

 | Jun 29, 2022 12:28

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Sugar trending higher in medium-term
  • Subsidies distort the supply and demand fundamentals
  • Free-market sugar is all about Brazil
  • Sugar is input in Brazilian biofuel
  • CANE ETF tracks portfolio of sugar futures contracts

World sugar futures trade on the Intercontinental Exchange. Since the late 1960s, the sweet commodity has been as low as 1.5 cents per pound and as high as 66 cents.

In 1985, when I was a junior options trader at a leading commodity trader, the price of the sweet commodity fell below 3 cents a pound. I suggested a long position as the risk-reward became compelling. Risking less than 3 cents to buy a commodity that was 22 times higher in the 1970s seemed logical. My boss, a brilliant options trader, asked me why we should buy anything that restaurants give away for free? I responded that it was historically cheap and he said he was a buyer at zero.

Sugar can be a highly volatile soft commodity, and the weather in critical growing regions impacts annual supplies. Meanwhile, the demand has been increasing for two reasons. First, the global population rises by around 20 million people each quarter, increasing sugar’s addressable market, as it is an ingredient in many foods. Second, sugar’s role as an input in biofuel has grown.

Sugar comes from sugarcane from tropical climates and sugar beets from more temperate areas. At around the 19 cents per pound level in June 2022, the price of sugar has been trending higher since April 2020, when it had reached a low of 9.05 cents per pound.

h2 Sugar Trending Higher In Medium-Term/h2

World sugar futures reached a low in April 2020 and made higher lows and higher highs until late 2021.