Commodities: Sugar Gets Sweeter

 | May 07, 2021 04:43

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • A late February multi-year high and pullback
  • Sugar has been rallying since Apr. 1 – A higher high in July futures
  • A recovery in oil supports sugar futures
  • A stronger Brazilian currency is bullish for the sweet commodity
  • If 2008 through 2011 is a model, sugar could be heading a lot higher

Sugar is a sweet commodity that is an essential ingredient in many of the foods we consume daily. While those sweet treats are part of our diets, too much of a good thing can be problematic. Added sugar intake leads to high blood pressure, inflammation, weight gain, diabetes, and fatty liver disease, all linked to an increased risk for heart attack and stroke.

In the US, added sugars account for up to 17% of the total 130 grams of sugar (glucose) each day to keep functioning.

Meanwhile, sugar is not only a food and energy source for the body; it is also the primary ingredient in ethanol in Brazil, the world’s leading producer and exporter of sugarcane.

Sugar is an essential raw material. Many countries worldwide, including the US and European Union, subsidize domestic sugar production as they view supplies as a national security matter. Sugar supplies come from two sources, sugarcane, which requires a tropical climate, and sugar beets, which can grow in other regions.

Sugar is a highly volatile agricultural product. Since the early 1970s, the sugar futures price has been as low as 2.29 cents and as high as 66 cents per pound. Since the turn of this century, the range has been from 4.62 to 36.08 cents per pound. At the 16.98 cents per pound level on the nearby July ICE sugar futures contract on Friday, Apr. 30, the price was below the average over the past two decades.

h2 A late February multi-year high and pullback/h2

After making a bullish reversal on the weekly chart in late April 2020, sugar climbed steadily, making higher lows and higher highs until reaching the highest level in four years in late February 2021.