Wilmar Makes Another Big Sugar Purchase; Focus Still on Brazil
02 March 2016 - 3:23AM
Dow Jones News
By Carolyn Cui
Wilmar International Ltd. has emerged as the sole buyer of
nearly 600,000 metric tons of raw sugar on the ICE Futures U.S.
Exchange against the March contract, in a purchase worth $192
million and marking the fourth delivery in a row taken by the
Asia-based commodity trade house.
In New York, prices for raw-sugar futures for May delivery
declined 0.8% to $14.24 a pound on Tuesday. The March contract
which expired a day earlier settled at $14.56, when Wilmar scooped
up all the sugar left on the exchange, according to brokers.
Over the past year, Wilmar spent over $1 billion in three
physical deliveries of raw sugar. The company couldn't be reached
for immediate comment.
The exchange on Tuesday published the details of the March
delivery, which showed a total of 11,791 contracts were up for
grabbing, with sugar coming from Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica
and other Central American countries. ADM Investor Services, EDF
Man Capital Markets Inc. and J.P. Morgan Securities were among the
firms that were on the hook to ship the sugar to Wilmar, according
to the exchange.
"The fact that somebody did step up and take it was taken by the
market as a positive sign, but the delivery is sort of a more
visual sign of normal demand offtake," said Michael McDougall,
director of commodities agency at Société Générale.
All eyes are still on Brazil, the world's largest sugar
exporter. Analysts are closely watching the weather in the country
and its impact on the cane production. Some Brazilian local
analysts have recently increased their estimate of the world
deficit this year from 3.8 million to 4.4 million tons, and
estimated the sugar production in Brazil at 33.8 million tons,
according to analysts at Marex Spectron.
"We have the impression that estimates are going up slightly on
the basis of good rains and the probability that relatively high
prices will have had a beneficial effect on yields," they wrote in
a note to clients.
It is unclear what motivated the purchase, but brokers said
Wilmar is likely to profit from Asia's growing demand and reduced
production. Outputs from India and Thailand are both estimated to
fall this year. But official sugar imports into China fell 23% in
January, raising questions about the underlying demand for the
sweetener.
In other markets, Arabica coffee for May dropped 1.1% to $1.1380
a pound, cocoa for May fell 0.9% to $2,928 a ton, and frozen
concentrated orange-juice futures for May dropped 0.7% to $1.257 a
pound. Cotton futures gained 0.5% to 56.80 cents a pound.
Write to Carolyn Cui at carolyn.cui@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 01, 2016 11:08 ET (16:08 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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