India Sugar Prices Will Gain 8% Next Year, Bajaj Says 

 
By Thomas Kutty Abraham
May 15  -- Sugar prices in India, the world’s biggest user, may be 8 percent 
higher on average next year as a decline in output squeezes supplies, Bajaj 
Hindusthan Ltd., country’s biggest producer, said. 
 
Prices may average 26,000 rupees ($525) a metric ton in the year from Oct. 1, 
compared with 24,000 rupees likely this year, Bajaj told investors in a note. 
Sugar has averaged 20,060 rupees this season on the National Commodity & 
Derivatives Exchange Ltd. 
Raw sugar in New York reached a three-year high this week on speculation a 
decline in India’s production may worsen the first global supply deficit in 
three years. Demand worldwide may top output by 7.8 million tons in the year to 
Sept. 30, compared with a previous estimate of 4.3 million tons, the 
International Sugar Organization has said. 
 
“The sugar industry has passed through difficult times in the past two years 
and all indicators suggest that the situation should correct in sugar season 
2009-10 and 2010-11,” Bajaj said. 
India’s cane output declined after the government raised the minimum price for 
competing crops such as wheat in a bid to bolster grain output, according to 
Czarnikow Group Ltd. Growers also switched acreage as cash-strapped mills 
delayed or withheld payments for cane supplies, Czarnikow said. 
 
Sugar futures for July delivery rose 0.1 percent to 15.49 cents a pound at 2:44 
p.m. in Mumbai in after-hours trading on ICE Futures U.S. in New York. On May 
12, the price reached 16.03 cents, the highest since July 2006. Refined, or 
white, sugar for August delivery in London was little changed at $437.50 a ton. 
 
Vashi Price 
Prices on the National Commodity & Derivatives Exchange Ltd. in Mumbai reached 
a record May 6, while rates at Vashi, India’s biggest market for the commodity, 
have gained 57 percent in the past year amid forecasts of lower output. 
June-delivery futures fell as much as much as 0.4 percent to 2,344 rupees per 
100 kilograms. Prices reached 2,430 rupees this month, the highest since 
trading began in 2004. 
 
Production may rebound to 18 million tons and imports will climb 50 percent to 
3 million tons, Bajaj said. Domestic demand will total 22.9 million tons in 
2009-10 even as end-of-season stocks halve to 2.5 million tons, the company 
said. 
The stocks-to-use ratio, or stockpiles relative to demand, will decline to 10.9 
percent next year from 19.6 percent this season, supporting prices, the company 
said.
 
India in February allowed duty-free raw sugar imports until September for 
processing and sale locally, and in April extended the tax break to white 
sugar. Four state-owned trading companies have been asked to import up to 1 
million tons by Aug. 1. 
 
The tax benefit may be extended to at least until October to cool prices, a 
government official said yesterday.
 


 



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