LONDON: Raw sugar futures on ICE were slightly lower on Friday with concerns about oversupply keeping the market on the defensive, while arabica coffee prices also eased.
SUGAR
* July raw sugar was down 0.06 cents, or 0.5 percent, at 11.21 cents per lb by 1148 GMT.
* Dealers said the strong early start to the harvest in Brazil had added to concerns about oversupply.
* Brazil’s centre-south, the world’s largest sugar producing region, crushed almost 50 percent more cane in April, the first month of the 2018/19 local crop season, than it did a year earlier, as dry weather accelerated field work.
* “It is more sugar (from Brazil) and with India looking to have record production next year it is not surprising the market is down,” one dealer said.
* Dealers said producers were slowly revising down the price at which they would be willing to sell.
* “Any rally is going to be sold (by producers) which is keeping a cap on the market,” the dealer added.
* August white sugar fell $2.10, or 0.65 percent, to$321.30 a tonne.
* The United States will produce nearly 9 million short tonnes of sugar in 2018/19, the lowest in two years, the US Department of Agriculture said in its first forecast for the crop year on Thursday.
COFFEE
* July arabica coffee fell 0.35 cent, or 0.3 percent, to $1.1920 per lb.
* Dealers said the market was keeping a close watch on Brazil’s real currency with its rebound on Thursday helping the market recover ground after falling to a two-week low of $1.1835 per lb.
* July robusta coffee rose $4, or 0.2 percent, to$1,747 a tonne.
COCOA
* July New York cocoa was up $11, or 0.4 percent, at$2,773 a tonne.
* A bearish target zone of $2,641-$2,692 per tonne remains unchanged for New York July cocoa as suggested by a projection analysis and a triangle, according to Reuters market analyst for commodities technicals Wang Tao.
* July London cocoa fell 9 pounds, or 0.5 percent, to 1,922 pounds a tonne.
Source: Brecorder