Thailand’s Raw Sugar Premium Slides as Global Supplies Improve

August 06, 2012 at 2:03 PM


By Isis Almeida and Jessica Abrahams

Aug. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Buyers of raw sugar from Thailand, the world’s second-biggest shipper, are paying a smaller premium for the sweetener on higher supplies from other producing nations, according to Green Pool Commodity Specialists Pty Ltd.

Raw sugar from Thailand is at a premium of 1.7 cents a pound above the price on the ICE Futures U.S. exchange in New York, the Brisbane, Australia-based researcher said in a weekly report e-mailed today. Thai raw sugar was at a premium of 2 to 2.60 cents a pound a week earlier, according to the report. Raw sugar futures slid 2.3 percent last week.

“Thai raw sugar premiums continued to fall over the week as increased supply from other origins relieved some pressure,” Tom McNeill, a director at the company, said in the report.

Sugar output in Brazil’s center south, the main growing region of the world’s biggest producer, rose 2 percent in the first half of July after dry weather helped to speed up the harvest, according to data from industry group Unica.

In India, the second-biggest producer and largest consumer, local prices climbed about 4.9 percent to $664.5 a metric ton as dry weather threatens to cut output. The country’s monsoon, which brings more than 70 percent of its annual rain, has been 19 percent below normal since June 1, according to India’s Meteorological Department.

Buyers of raw sugar from Brazil are paying a premium of 0.1 to 0.25 cent for immediate loading, he said. Sugar for loading in September is at the same price as the October futures contract in New York, according to the report.

Raw sugar for October delivery dropped 0.3 percent to 21.93 cents a pound by 4:21 a.m. in New York.

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