Friday 15 May 2015

Agri Buzz: Kingsman Says Little Hope For Sugar Bulls On Lesser Than Expected Deficits

Platts Kingsman cautioned over a long-awaited recovery in sugar prices as it ditched expectations of a production deficit this season, and slashed its forecast for a shortfall in 2015-16 below 500,000 tonnes. Unless there are major weather events, the long-awaited bull run in sugar remains elusive, said Claudiu Covrig, senior agricultural analyst at the Swiss-based analysis group. The comment came as Kingsman hiked its forecast for sugar supplies over this season and next by a combined 8.3m tonnes. This included a revision to a production surplus of 3.39m tonnes, from a deficit of 122,000 tonnes, its forecast for supplies in 2014-15, on an October-to-September basis. The revision was fuelled by higher crush expectations for India, Brazil's key Centre South region and Thailand, which combined… give market bulls little hope, Mr Covrig said. These numbers show that getting rid of a stubborn surplus will be harder than some anticipated, with output now looking like exceeding consumption for a fifth successive season. Kingsman slashed its forecast for the deficit next season from 5.247m tonnes to 466,000 tonnes - reflecting a 3.8m-tonne upgrade to 29.9m tonnes, raw value, in sugar output in India, the second-ranked producing country. Brazil's Centre South, for which Kingsman raised its production forecast for 2015-16 (using the local April-to-March crush year) by 1.1m tonnes to 33.23m tonnes. 
The comments came as Unica, the cane industry group, for the Centre South, revealed that sugar output in the Centre South reached 1.59m tonnes last month, up 6.1% year on year. The increase reflected an increase of 12% to 45.0m tonnes in cane production, offset by a decline in the proportion of crop turned into sugar rather than ethanol.

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