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Tag: Sugar (Mar'23)

  • El Niño's 'sweet tooth' means indulgent treats could soon be even more expensive

    El Niño's 'sweet tooth' means indulgent treats could soon be even more expensive

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    Sugar for sale at a supermarket in Yichang City, in China’s Hubei province, on April 6, 2023.

    Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty Images

    A mammoth rally in 2023 for El Niño-exposed raw materials will likely hit consumers’ pockets over the coming months, according to one specialist food and agribusiness bank.

    Soft commodities have posted huge gains year-to-date.

    Futures contracts on orange juice, cocoa, coffee and sugar have soared in part because of extreme weather and supply concerns related to El Niño.

    “You can say El Niño has a sweet tooth because it sort of eats or takes away much of the sugar in the world,” Carlos Mera, head of agri commodities market research at Netherlands-based Rabobank, told CNBC.

    “Sugar prices have probably already been passed on [to consumers] but certainly for chocolate we should expect a big increase at retail level — and El Niño is certainly something to watch.”

    The El Niño phenomenon, which returned earlier this year, is a naturally occurring climate pattern that takes place when sea temperatures in the eastern Pacific rise 0.5 degrees Celsius above the long-term average. It can pave the way to more storms and droughts.

    Orange juice on display in a grocery store on Jan. 19, 2023, in Miami, Florida.

    Joe Raedle | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    The effects of El Niño tend to peak during December, but the impact typically takes time to spread across the globe. This lagged effect is why forecasters believe 2024 could be the first year that humanity surpasses a critical warming threshold.

    El Niño-related dryness in much of Southeast Asia, India, Australia and parts of Africa has supported a price rally for soft commodities such as sugar, coffee and cocoa this year, Rabobank said in its annual outlook for 2024.

    The Dutch bank broadly expects global food price inflation to fall sharply after years of soaring prices.

    It also warned that several crops could be adversely affected by El Niño early next year, while acknowledging there is the potential for some crops to benefit, citing those in the United States, southern Brazil and Argentina.

    Surging soft commodities

    Orange juice futures climbed a whopping 80% in 2023, hitting an all-time high in late November after hurricanes and disease devastated citrus crops in Florida.

    “Occasionally, these markets exceed our wildest expectations. Did anyone predict $4.00 orange juice? The profit potential from this trade is staggering,” trader Dave Reiter of Reiter Capital Investments LLC said on Oct. 30 via X, formerly known as Twitter.

    Reiter has since warned that the eventual crash in the price of orange juice “will be one for the record books.”

    The price of cocoa, a vital ingredient for chocolate, jumped 64% this year to notch 46-year highs as West African supplies were hit hard by heavy rains and amid issues such as fungal disease.

    The robusta coffee variety on Dec. 15 hit its highest level in 15 years, while sugar prices have risen 13% in 2023 even after paring gains since registering a 12-year peak in September.

    Workers collect dry cocoa beans in front of the store of a cocoa cooperative in the village of Hermankono on Nov. 14, 2023.

    Sia Kambou | Afp | Getty Images

    Rabobank’s Mera said there is a “very clear” relationship between El Niño and higher sugar prices because the weather pattern tends to make conditions in major sugar exporting countries such as Thailand, India and Australia drier than normal.

    For cocoa, Mera said the impact of El Niño is likely to be “much weaker.” He added that the mechanics of the cocoa market means higher chocolate prices are not likely to immediately weaken demand or even incentivize production.

    “The cocoa industry is characterized by a lot of forward selling in part because of how cocoa is traded [in the Ivory Coast and Ghana],” Mera said, referring to the world’s two largest cocoa producers.

    “For example, they tend to sell the crop a year in advance. That means that the chocolate that you buy in the supermarket has probably been bought at a much lower price a year ago,” he added.

    “I’m surprised that cocoa is so much higher and that is not felt by the consumers just yet,” Mera said. “It will be — that cost will be passed to consumers at some point in 2024.”

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  • CNBC Daily Open: Earnings look weak despite beating expectations

    CNBC Daily Open: Earnings look weak despite beating expectations

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    The Tesla Inc. Gigafactory stands in Shanghai, China, on Friday, Nov. 1, 2019.

    Qilai Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    Markets were mostly flat Wednesday despite major companies reporting. Investors weren’t swayed by better-than-expected numbers.

    What you need to know today

    • Morgan Stanley, like fellow investment bank Goldman Sachs, had a tough first quarter. Morgan Stanley’s earnings fell 19% from a year earlier to $2.98 billion, and its revenue slipped 2% to $14.52 billion. Still, both figures beat Wall Street’s expectations, boosting the bank’s shares 0.67%.
    • IBM’s first-quarter revenue rose just 0.4% from a year earlier to $14.25 billion, but its net income jumped a more drastic 26% to $927 million. That suggests the technology giant managed to improve margins. Investors cheered, pushing its shares up 1.61% in extended trading.
    • Sugar prices hit 24.37 cents a pound, an 11-year high. That’ll cause food prices to spike, analysts said, as many of processed items contain sugar. Worse, supply of sugar looks like it’ll remain constrained this year because of extreme weather, which means prices could increase further.
    • PRO Earnings reports from regional banks show that deposits are stabilizing. Investors were so bullish on one regional bank that they caused its shares to surge 24.12% on Wednesday.

    The bottom line

    Companies have been beating earnings estimates. The 44 companies in the S&P 500 that had reported earnings as of Tuesday night posted sales growth that was 2.2 percentage points better than expected and earnings that were 8 percentage points higher than forecast, according to Julian Emanuel at Evercore ISI.

    Adding on to the optimism, the Cboe Volatility Index — a gauge of investor fear popularly known as the VIX — is near a 52-week low. In other words, investors think stock prices will rise over the next 30 days.

    Yet the positive sentiment hasn’t seeped into broader markets. Of course, individual stocks have reflected companies’ financial health. IBM, for example, rose on the news that it managed to trim costs, while Netflix sank 3.17% because its earnings fell.

    But the broader indexes have remained essentially flat. There are, in my opinion, two reasons for that.

    First, even though companies have been reporting better-than-expected results, that trend could have low base expectations to thank: Analysts think S&P 500 earnings will fall 5.2% in the first quarter. But this has the effect of making earnings look better than they actually are. As CNBC Pro’s Scott Schnipper wrote, “Expectations about the immediate earnings outlook have been down for so long, the actual numbers themselves could look like up to investors.”

    Second, fewer major companies gave forecasts for the year ahead. The lack of direction regarding their future earnings, coupled with a possible interest rate hike in the U.S. — which now seems more concrete after the U.K. reported yesterday that its inflation remained in the double digits — exacerbated investors’ uncertainty.

    It appears that investors are already training their eyes on the Federal Reserve’s next meeting in May, rather than poring over last quarter’s earnings.

    Subscribe here to get this report sent directly to your inbox each morning before markets open.

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