March NY world sugar #11 (SBH26) on Thursday closed down -0.28 (-1.90%), and March London ICE white sugar #5 (SWH26) closed down -6.40 (-1.52%).
Sugar prices fell sharply on Thursday to 1-week lows today amid prospects of higher sugar exports from India, after India’s food secretary said the government may permit additional sugar exports to reduce a domestic supply glut. Last month, India’s food ministry said it would allow mills to export 1.5 MMT of sugar in the 2025/26 season. India introduced a quota system for sugar exports in 2022/23 after late rain reduced production and limited domestic supplies.
Weakness in the Brazilian real is also bearish for sugar prices. The real (^USDBRL) fell to a 4.5-month low against the dollar today, encouraging export sales from Brazil’s sugar producers.
Sugar prices were already on the defensive from Monday when the India Sugar Mill Association (ISMA) reported that Indian 2025-26 sugar production from October 1 to December 15 jumped +28% y/y to 7.83 MMT.
Signs of a larger sugar crop in India, the world’s second-largest producer, are undercutting prices after the India Sugar Mill Association (ISMA) on November 11 raised its 2025/26 India sugar production estimate to 31 MMT from an earlier forecast of 30 MMT, up +18.8% y/y. The ISMA also cut its estimate for sugar used for ethanol production in India to 3.4 MMT from a July forecast of 5 MMT, which may allow India to boost its sugar exports.
The outlook for higher sugar exports from India is negative for sugar prices, as India’s National Federation of Cooperative Sugar Factories projected that India’s 2025/26 sugar production would climb +19% y/y to 34.9 MMT, citing larger planted cane acreage. That would follow a -17.5% y/y decline in India’s sugar production in 2024/25 to a 5-year low of 26.1 MMT, according to the Indian Sugar Mills Association (ISMA).
The outlook for record sugar output in Brazil is also bearish for prices. Conab, Brazil’s crop forecasting agency, on November 4 raised its Brazil 2025/26 sugar production estimate to 45 MMT from a previous forecast of 44.5 MMT. On Tuesday, Unica reported that Brazil’s cumulative 2025-26 Center-South sugar output through November rose by +1.1% y/y to 39.904 MMT. Also, the amount of cane crushed for sugar rose to 51.12% in 2025/36 from 48.34% in 2024/25.


