Raw sugar extends recovery but upside capped, cocoa falls

  • October raw sugar edged up 0.2% to 16.96 cents per lb.
  • September New York cocoa slipped 0.2% to $2,398 a tonne, having hit its highest in nearly a month on Monday.
15 Jul, 2021

LONDON: Raw sugar futures on ICE edged up on Thursday, extending a recovery from Tuesday's two-week lows, while cocoa prices fell as excess supplies continue to pressure the market.

SUGAR

October raw sugar edged up 0.2% to 16.96 cents per lb at 1050 GMT, having hit a two-week low of 16.73 cents on Tuesday.

Dealers said sugar's upside remains capped by a lack of physical demand, fund long liquidation and from scale down buying from commercial consumers.

The CEO of Suedzucker, Europe's largest sugar refiner, reaffirmed expectations of better full-year profit on hopes the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic will subside.

August white sugar rose 0.4% to $427 a tonne.

COCOA

September New York cocoa slipped 0.2% to $2,398 a tonne, having hit its highest in nearly a month on Monday.

London cocoa hits 1-1/2 month peak, raw sugar hits 2-week trough

Swiss chocolate maker Barry Callebaut said sales volume growth accelerated in the three months to May 31, with growth in the chocolate business jumping over 20%.

The group, which supplies chocolate and cocoa products to customers including Nestle, Mondelez and Hershey, said on-the-go consumption has recovered since many COVID-related lockdowns eased.

Still cocoa supplies remain ample following bumper harvests in top growers Ivory Coast and Ghana this season, capping cocoa prices.

North American cocoa grind data, a measure of demand, is expected later on Thursday.

September London cocoa fell 0.7% to 1,623 pounds per tonne, having hit its highest in 1-1/2 months on Tuesday.

COFFEE

September arabica coffee fell 0.6% to $1.5575 per lb, having hit its highest since early July earlier.

Arabica coffee hits 3-week high on Brazil frost fears

Arabica is gaining support from a strengthening in the Brazilian real versus the dollar, and from shipping bottlenecks that have delayed flows from top producers Brazil and Vietnam.

September robusta coffee fell 1% to $1,745 a tonne, having hit its highest in more than 2-1/2 years on Monday.

Coffee prices in top robusta producer Vietnam edged up this week due to tight supplies at the end of the season and shipping container bottlenecks, traders said.

Read Comments