Raw sugar prices are at an 11-year high. Sugar prices have gone up because of a decrease in overall production, poor weather, and erratic market conditions. In April, Indian sugar prices rose for the fourth consecutive month.
Price rise is a consequence of bad weather, which will continue to hamper crop output and the supply of the commodity on the market. Analysts believe that prices could rise even further.
The cane-crushing season has now started to wind down, and significant downward crop revisions have started in important sugar-producing countries like India, Thailand, China, and Pakistan. After Brazil, India is the second-largest producer of sugar worldwide.
Indian Sugar Mills Association (ISMA), the trade association for the sugar sector, reduced its prior estimate of the nation's sugar production from 340 lakh tonnes to 328 lakh tonnes for the current marketing year ending in September.
In the short to medium term, sugar fundamentals are highly bullish, according to Girish Chhimwal, an analyst for S&P. Analysts also claim that prices for processed meals are also rising globally, as reported by Money Control.