Investor sweet tooth bumps sugar prices to 4-year high
Walt and Alex
Breitinger
Higher sugar prices lead this edition of Futures File, our weekly commodities wrap-up.
Sugar prices exploded last week, pushing over 23 cents per pound, the highest level in over four years. Prices have more than doubled during the past year as a global sugar shortfall looms after two years of disappointing harvests.
Sugar is produced around the world, extracted from sugar cane in tropical climates and sugar beets in higher latitudes, but almost half of all sugar production comes from just three countries: Brazil, India, and Thailand. All three nations’ sugar-cane crops were hurt by the recent El Nino cycle, which stripped them of much-needed rains.
As a result, global supply will likely fall short of demand again this year, which has led to rampant buying from end users and investors alike. As of midday Friday, raw sugar for delivery in October traded for 22 cents per pound in New York.
Copper prices shined on a one-month high Friday, nearing $2.20 per pound.
Prices had been languishing near $2 for the past year, causing global miners to scale back production.
Global demand, especially from the top-consumer China, has been tepid, but the cutback in production has led to a global supply deficit. If China’s growth returns to its former levels, some analysts expect that the global copper deficit could turn to a shortage by 2018, which might take prices back toward the 2011 high over $4.50 per pound.
Copper is an excellent conductor of electricity and heat, making it widely used in the manufacturing and construction sectors. Unfortunately for builders, as copper’s cost is rising, so too is lumber, which is near the highest price since 2015.
After showing signs of life recently, the cattle market turned sharply lower at the end of the week, plunging Friday.
The drop came as U.S. beef prices fell to a threeyear low, according to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Weak consumer demand for beef and overwhelming supplies of cattle are causing meatpackers to lower the price they’ll pay cattle producers, driving the futures market lower.
The market was especially active Friday as ranchers, meatpackers, and traders positioned themselves ahead of the USDA’s monthly Cattle on Feed Report, which was released after the market closed.
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