Oil prices fuel sweet sugar returns
By Saijel Kishan and Carlos Caminada International Herald Tribune
MONDAY, MARCH 20, 2006
LONDON Sugar, the best performing commodity in the past 12 months, is poised to beat returns on bonds, stocks and oil for a second consecutive year.
"Sugar could quadruple from here and it would still be below its all-time high," said James Rogers, a former George Soros partner who founded Diapason Commodities Management. "The rally hasn't even started yet. And the fundamentals are changing dramatically in a positive way."
Prices are soaring as record gasoline costs prompt Brazil, the world's biggest sugar producer, to devote more than half of its crop to ethanol production to meet a goal of eliminating gasoline- fueled cars in four years. A drought in Thailand, the second-biggest exporter, and a 50 percent rise in China's demand in the past decade are compounding the squeeze.
"Sugar will definitely outperform bonds and equities this year, primarily because of supply constraints," said Andreas Meyer at Merit Alternative Investments, who set up the Commodities Opportunities Fund two months ago.
Sugar climbed 60 percent in 2005 and is up 12 percent so far this year. By comparison, the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index has gained 4.7 percent since Dec. 31, while U.S. government bonds have dropped 0.44 percent, according to Merrill Lynch.
"It's a meager year for bond returns compared to what may be in the offing in other asset classes," said Jack Malvey, chief global fixed-income strategist at Lehman Brothers.
Raw sugar for May delivery closed last week at 16.44 cents a pound on the New York Board of Trade. The record was 66 cents a pound in 1974.
Sugar's rally has increased costs for companies like the cereal maker Kellogg and the candy maker Hershey, where analysts estimate sugar accounts for 10 percent of the cost of goods sold. Hershey's cost of sales last year rose 11 percent, and Kellogg's rose 5.9 percent.
Some say that the cost crush will only worsen. Global sugar production will fall short of demand this year by twice as much as initially expected as world stockpiles dwindle and consumpt
By Saijel Kishan and Carlos Caminada International Herald Tribune
MONDAY, MARCH 20, 2006
LONDON Sugar, the best performing commodity in the past 12 months, is poised to beat returns on bonds, stocks and oil for a second consecutive year.
"Sugar could quadruple from here and it would still be below its all-time high," said James Rogers, a former George Soros partner who founded Diapason Commodities Management. "The rally hasn't even started yet. And the fundamentals are changing dramatically in a positive way."
Prices are soaring as record gasoline costs prompt Brazil, the world's biggest sugar producer, to devote more than half of its crop to ethanol production to meet a goal of eliminating gasoline- fueled cars in four years. A drought in Thailand, the second-biggest exporter, and a 50 percent rise in China's demand in the past decade are compounding the squeeze.
"Sugar will definitely outperform bonds and equities this year, primarily because of supply constraints," said Andreas Meyer at Merit Alternative Investments, who set up the Commodities Opportunities Fund two months ago.
Sugar climbed 60 percent in 2005 and is up 12 percent so far this year. By comparison, the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index has gained 4.7 percent since Dec. 31, while U.S. government bonds have dropped 0.44 percent, according to Merrill Lynch.
"It's a meager year for bond returns compared to what may be in the offing in other asset classes," said Jack Malvey, chief global fixed-income strategist at Lehman Brothers.
Raw sugar for May delivery closed last week at 16.44 cents a pound on the New York Board of Trade. The record was 66 cents a pound in 1974.
Sugar's rally has increased costs for companies like the cereal maker Kellogg and the candy maker Hershey, where analysts estimate sugar accounts for 10 percent of the cost of goods sold. Hershey's cost of sales last year rose 11 percent, and Kellogg's rose 5.9 percent.
Some say that the cost crush will only worsen. Global sugar production will fall short of demand this year by twice as much as initially expected as world stockpiles dwindle and consumpt