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Brazil's top sugar region may miss output forecast

Wednesday, 2 September 2009


NEW DELHI, Sept. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Sugar output from Brazil's Center South, the world's biggest producing region, may be less than estimated earlier this year because of heavy rainfall, adding to signs of a global shortfall.
Production may be less than the 31.2 million metric tons estimated in April, Eduardo Leao de Sousa, executive director of industry association Unica, said today in an interview, without giving a precise forecast. The rains had cut yields, Leao de Sousa said in New Delhi, where he's attending a conference.
Raw sugar has surged to the highest in 28 years on production shortfalls in Brazil and India, and increased competition for imports. The jump in price, which has made sugar the best-performing commodity over the past year, has sparked hoarding in India, the biggest user and second-largest grower.
"There's still room for a further increase in prices if Indian demand remains strong," said Plinio Mario Nastari, president of Datagro Ltd., a Sao Paulo-based sugar-research company. "Brazil's capacity to export sugar is limited."
Raw sugar for October on ICE Futures US rose as much as 4.1 per cent yesterday to 24.48 cents, the highest since February 1981. The commodity is the best performer on the UBS Bloomberg Constant Maturity Commodity Index over the past 12 months.