Wondering Where Sugar Is Headed Next? Watch Energy And Currency Markets

 | Jan 25, 2021 23:53

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Sugar rises to multi-year high
  • Keep an eye on the Brazilian currency
  • Energy prices are bullish for sugar
  • Weather in Brazil is always a critical factor
  • In a commodity bull market, sugar has explosive potential: An ETF and an ETN track the price of the soft commodity

Because many countries worldwide subsidize the production of sugar, it's a two-tiered market. World sugar that trades on the Intercontinental Exchange reflects the free market price of the soft commodity.

Brazil is the leading producer and exporter of sugarcane. Each year’s Brazilian crop is a critical factor for the path of least resistance of the sweet commodity’s price.

Since the early 1970s, world sugar futures have traded as low as 2.29 and as high as 66.0 cents per pound. I was a commodity option trader and market maker in the mid-1980s when the price of sugar reached its low. I was starting my career and pointed out the low price to the head options trader, suggesting that it could be a perfect opportunity for a long position. His answer was memorable:

Why would I ever want to buy a product that restaurants give away for free?

Meanwhile, the low for the agricultural commodity occurred in 1985. By 1986, sugar more than quadrupled in price, reaching a high of 9.58 cents per pound.

Sugar is not only a food ingredient, it is also the primary ingredient in ethenol in Brazil. Therefore, gasoline, biofuel, and currency levels impact sugar’s price. Now, in early 2021, sugar has broken out to a multi-year high, reaching 16.75 cents per pound on Jan. 14.

h2 Sugar rises to multi-year high/h2

In the world sugar futures market, 2020 was a volatile year. The sweet commodity’s price rose to a high of 15.90 cents per pound in February, which was the highest level for the commodity since May 2017. The global pandemic caused a meltdown in markets across all asset classes, and sugar was no exception. In April, the price dropped to 9.05 cents, the lowest level since 2007.

Since then, sugar posted gains in eight consecutive months.