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Where Oil And Gold Fail, Sugar Gives Investors Its Own High

Published 10/04/2019, 10:46 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM

Away from the madness in crude oil and intrigue in gold, another commodity has been having a drama of its own over the past month. Raw sugar, which fell to a near one-year low just four weeks ago, has catapulted to beyond seven-month highs.

The fundamental story in sugar is a supply squeeze in its second largest producer, India.

But the technical narrative is what’s getting investors excited, or rather, giving them that sugar high.

Very Undervalued?

Eric Scoles, commodities strategist at RJO Futures in Chicago, laid it out well:

“I’m not worried about the world running out of sugar any time soon, but I think sugar is very undervalued.”
“My opinion: As far as bullish opportunities go, this market is looking sweet.”

Raw sugar’s most-active December contract on ICE Futures U.S. settled down for the first time in four sessions on Thursday, dropping 1.2% to 12.74 cents per lb. In the three days prior to that, it gained a net 11.5%.

Longest Winning Streak Since June

Sugar 300-Min Chart - Powered by TradingView

Since hitting a 11-½ month low of 10.68 cents on Sept. 12, sugar has been on a roll, rising in six of out of every 10 sessions.

Just before Thursday’s drop, it hit 12.93 cents, its highest price since the week ended Feb. 24.

The commodity is also on track to post its third straight weekly rise in the current week, a tally that will give it a gain of more than 16%.

Dean Popplewell, analyst at New York-based brokerage OANDA, noted that it would be sugar’s longest winning streak since June.

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He added, primarily citing India’s production deficit:

“Sugar is enjoying a bull run amid concerns about tightening global supply. Estimates for the 2020/21 season suggest a shortfall of seven million tons.”

Some Calling Caution...

But Popplewell also raised some cautionary flags:

“There are a number of technical resistance points to the upside.”
“The 55-week moving average is at 12.06, the 200-day moving average is at 12.08 and the 100-week moving average is at 12.24.”

Investing.com has a “Strong Buy” recommendation for raw sugar on its Daily Technical Outlook, projecting a resistance as high as 13.11 cents for the December contract.

...Others Greater Highs

However, Scoles of RJO Futures made an even higher call:

“You should note on the chart that last year, at nearly this exact same time, prices fell below 12.50 temporarily, before spiking up from roughly 12.30 to about 14.80 in just 3 weeks.”

Sugar has also sealed the highest gains among all commodities over the past month, gaining 16%. In comparison, gold is down almost 1% while U.S. crude oil has lost more than 6%.

Latest comments

Brian McGilvray, thanks for outpointing. The odd thing is the rollover month didn't register on Investing.com's system although the prices captured are for March. I relied on the Investing data to write this, and the analysts' notes also referred to December, though on checking the ICE page now, I notice it's March. So, the price action is right, only the month isn't. I'll have to bring this up with the database team, and we'll fix the references in the story to March. Thanks again for outpointing, though I wouldn't have used that "get a new job" remark to make my case. But it's an Investing.com database error, so we accept readers' grouses.
Don’t write about futures contracts from previous contract prices that have rolled. Get a new job.
Brian, thanks for outpointing. The odd thing is the rollover month didn't register on Investing.com's system although the prices captured are for March. I relied on the Investing data to write this, and the analysts' notes also referred to December, though on checking the ICE page now, I notice it's March. So, the price action is right, only the month isn't. I'll have to bring this up with the database team, and we'll fix the references in the story to March. Thanks again for outpointing, though I wouldn't have used that "get a new job" remark to make my case. But it's an Investing.com database error, so we accept readers' grouses.
The faux pass is due to database feed error, apart from that your observations are apt for the forthcoming weeks as India the second largest sugar producer reports substantial deficit in output damaged due to the flood and heavy rains which is likely to restrict exports for maintaining domestic prices as in onions.
Almost all of the price gain was contract contango from rollover, like over a dollar in the price.
Cute article though, but it’s misleading, are people that were holding etf sgg up 16%? Or 6%
Please see reply above, Brian
Thanks for the feedback. Please do continue commenting/following us here and @Investingcom on Twitter. My handle is @barani_krishnan.
Dear Sri Bharani Krishnan, I have seen almost all the articles published in this web site are not mentioning a word about India .Why? I think you may know very well India is the second largest populated country in the world which plays important roll in all .aspects across the globe..
Dear Adeva, we are a financial site that also covers political risk when market-related situations warrant. We don't look to profile or cite specific nations unless required for background. For instance, we'd mention in our oil coverage that Saudi Arabia is the largest's exporter and administered by a kingdom. Beyond that, we wouldn't get into Saudi national or political specifics unless required by the story. Likewise, here. This story does cite India as the second largest sugar producer. But beyond that we do not find a reason to speak about the country. Hope that explains.
Good morning. Sri Bharani Krishnan sir...ai am very happy with your (from one of the senior editor) reply
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