Sugar Falls in New York as Port Backlog Eases; Cocoa Advances

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2013-04-11/sugar-falls-in-new-york-as-port-backlog-eases-cocoa-advances

April 11, 2013 at 9:40 AM


Sugar fell for the first time in New York this week on signs bottlenecks at ports in leading producer Brazil have eased just as the harvest is set to start. Cocoa and arabcia coffee advanced.

The amount of sugar awaiting loading at ports in Brazil fell 6.6 percent over the past week, according to Williams Servicos Maritimos Ltda. As many as 764,053 metric tons were waiting to be loaded onto ships at the ports of Recife, Maceio, Paranagua and Santos, the country’s biggest, according to an e- mail from the Recife, Brazil-based shipping agency. That’s a sign logistical constraints are easing, said Jerome Jourquin, head of agricultural commodity derivatives at Aurel BGC.

“There is a consensus to say that the sugar situation is bearish even if the logistic problems had offered a temporary support, especially on spreads,” Paris-based Jourquin said by e-mail today. “The main mid-term target remains 16 cents a pound.”

Raw sugar for July delivery fell 0.5 percent to 17.80 cents a pound by 7:02 a.m. on ICE Futures U.S. in New York. It rose 0.9 percent yesterday. White sugar for August delivery was down 0.4 percent to $492.70 a ton on NYSE Liffe in London.

Sugar production in Brazil’s center south, the main growing region, will be a record 39.2 million tons this season, the government estimates. That is higher than the 34 million to 35.2 million tons forecast by a Bloomberg survey of six mill owners that make up for a third of the areas’ supply. Harvesting there is set to start this month.

The premium white sugar commands over the raw variety fell 21 percent over three weeks, indicating demand is slowing and availability is increasing as millers in Thailand, the second- biggest exporter, convert more raw sweetener into the white variety, Tom McNeill, a director at Green Pool Commodity Specialists Pty. said by phone from Brisbane, Australia today.

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