Sugar Monthly Price - Rand per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Dec 2017 - Jun 2025: 2.356 (55.57%)
Chart

Description: Sugar (world), International Sugar Agreement (ISA) daily price, raw, f.o.b. and stowed at greater Caribbean ports

Unit: Rand per Kilogram



Source: International Sugar Organization; Thomson Reuters Datastream; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Sugar is a globally traded sweetener and industrial input derived mainly from sugarcane and sugar beet. On commodity markets, the most widely followed raw sugar benchmark is No. 11 sugar on the New York Board of Trade, quoted in U.S. dollars per kilogram or, more commonly in market practice, cents per pound. This contract reflects bulk raw cane sugar suitable for refining, rather than the refined white sugar sold to consumers. Sugar is used directly in food and beverage manufacturing, confectionery, bakery products, dairy items, and household consumption. It also serves as a feedstock for fermentation-based products, including ethanol in some producing regions, and as an ingredient in pharmaceuticals and other processed goods. Because sugar is storable and globally traded, prices reflect the balance between harvest conditions, milling output, refining capacity, freight access, and the interaction between cane-based and beet-based supply systems.

Supply Drivers

Sugar supply is shaped by the biology of cane and beet cultivation and by the geography of processing. Sugarcane grows best in tropical and subtropical regions, while sugar beet is concentrated in temperate zones with suitable soils and growing seasons. Cane production depends on rainfall, temperature, and the timing of the harvest-milling cycle, because cut cane deteriorates quickly and must be processed soon after harvest. Beet production is more seasonal and tied to planting and lifting windows, with yields sensitive to moisture, frost, and soil conditions. Weather shocks, including drought, excessive rain, frost, and cyclones, can reduce sucrose content and field yields.

Long production lags matter: acreage decisions, planting, and mill investment are made well before output reaches the market. Milling capacity, rail and port access, and domestic logistics strongly influence how much sugar reaches export channels. In cane systems, the allocation of cane between sugar and ethanol can alter export availability, especially where mills have flexible processing. Disease, pests, and soil exhaustion also affect yields over time. Because sugar is bulky and relatively low in unit value, transport costs and freight bottlenecks are important in determining which origins compete in world trade.

Demand Drivers

Sugar demand is driven by food processing, household consumption, and industrial uses. It is a basic input in confectionery, soft drinks, baked goods, jams, sauces, dairy products, and many packaged foods. Demand is relatively stable because sugar is a staple sweetener, but it is also sensitive to income growth, urbanization, and the expansion of processed food consumption. In many markets, sugar competes with alternative sweeteners such as high-fructose corn syrup, glucose syrups, and non-nutritive sweeteners. The degree of substitution depends on local food manufacturing practices, relative prices, and regulatory standards.

Seasonality matters in consumption patterns, especially where confectionery and beverage demand rises during holidays or warm-weather periods. Industrial demand can also be influenced by ethanol economics in cane-producing regions, because mills may divert cane toward fuel when relative returns favor that channel. Public health policies, labeling rules, and sugar taxes can affect long-run consumption patterns by changing product formulation and consumer behavior, although the underlying demand for sweetness remains broad and persistent. Because sugar is embedded in many processed foods, demand is less discretionary than for luxury goods, but more adaptable than for some staple grains.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Sugar prices are influenced by the U.S. dollar because the benchmark contract is dollar-denominated and because many exporters and importers manage revenues and costs in different currencies. A stronger dollar can tighten purchasing power for non-dollar buyers, while a weaker dollar can support import demand. Interest rates matter through inventory financing and carry costs: sugar is storable, so holding stocks involves storage, insurance, and funding expenses that shape futures curves. When nearby supply is ample, markets may trade in contango; when prompt availability is tight, backwardation can appear.

Sugar also responds to broader commodity sentiment because it is part of the agricultural complex and competes for speculative capital with other soft commodities. Energy prices matter indirectly through freight, fertilizer, and, in cane regions, the economics of ethanol versus sugar production. Inflation can support nominal commodity prices over long horizons, but sugar remains primarily driven by crop fundamentals and trade flows rather than by financial factors alone.

MonthPriceChange
Dec 20174.24-
Jan 20183.79-10.66%
Feb 20183.55-6.23%
Mar 20183.31-6.77%
Apr 20183.27-1.25%
May 20183.393.55%
Jun 20183.729.96%
Jul 20183.48-6.61%
Aug 20183.38-2.74%
Sep 20183.709.36%
Oct 20184.2013.56%
Nov 20183.96-5.83%
Dec 20183.970.47%
Jan 20193.88-2.38%
Feb 20194.003.19%
Mar 20194.030.61%
Apr 20193.96-1.68%
May 20193.90-1.63%
Jun 20194.084.70%
Jul 20193.93-3.75%
Aug 20194.094.23%
Sep 20193.85-5.80%
Oct 20194.188.32%
Nov 20194.14-0.74%
Dec 20194.344.77%
Jan 20204.472.83%
Feb 20204.9410.69%
Mar 20204.31-12.70%
Apr 20204.23-1.96%
May 20204.352.88%
Jun 20204.626.26%
Jul 20204.53-2.13%
Aug 20204.9910.25%
Sep 20204.68-6.28%
Oct 20204.945.53%
Nov 20204.83-2.19%
Dec 20204.67-3.34%
Jan 20215.1410.15%
Feb 20215.323.61%
Mar 20215.10-4.26%
Apr 20215.191.71%
May 20215.353.24%
Jun 20215.29-1.20%
Jul 20215.687.47%
Aug 20216.3712.13%
Sep 20216.26-1.72%
Oct 20216.24-0.44%
Nov 20216.666.75%
Dec 20216.660.00%
Jan 20226.20-6.86%
Feb 20225.94-4.20%
Mar 20226.306.07%
Apr 20226.472.69%
May 20226.835.62%
Jun 20226.63-2.96%
Jul 20226.741.62%
Aug 20226.51-3.34%
Sep 20226.834.86%
Oct 20227.073.49%
Nov 20227.211.94%
Dec 20227.280.97%
Jan 20237.18-1.34%
Feb 20238.0512.13%
Mar 20238.232.27%
Apr 20239.6317.04%
May 202310.6610.64%
Jun 202310.15-4.79%
Jul 20239.43-7.05%
Aug 20239.945.38%
Sep 202311.0110.77%
Oct 202310.85-1.46%
Nov 202310.54-2.85%
Dec 20238.98-14.82%
Jan 20249.020.49%
Feb 20249.505.28%
Mar 20249.06-4.66%
Apr 20248.49-6.22%
May 20247.74-8.91%
Jun 20247.932.52%
Jul 20247.85-1.04%
Aug 20247.39-5.82%
Sep 20247.937.24%
Oct 20248.081.87%
Nov 20248.07-0.11%
Dec 20247.94-1.59%
Jan 20257.49-5.70%
Feb 20257.773.79%
Mar 20257.68-1.17%
Apr 20257.55-1.64%
May 20257.06-6.47%
Jun 20256.60-6.64%

Top Companies

Südzucker AG
Website: http://www.suedzucker.de/
Location: Manheim, Germany
Estimated Production: 4.6 million tonnes per year

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