I think BC has a short on the sugar futures. This should make him happy
COMMODITIES-Sugar sees biggest day loss since 2008; cotton upTuesday February 23, 2010 10:38:22 PM GMT
By Barani Krishnan
NEW YORK, Feb 22 (Reuters) - U.S. sugar prices took their biggest one-day loss in almost two years on Monday on worries about a bumper crop underway in Brazil, while coffee plumbed an eight-month low in London on heavy selling by funds.
Soybean and grains rose on concerns that rains were delaying harvests. Cotton neared a two-year peak on speculation that supplies of the fiber were tightening.
Outside of agricultural markets, the dollar forced gold and copper down as the currency strengthened against the euro.
The Reuters-Jefferies CRB index finished down 0.4 percent, reflecting the mixed close across the 19 commodity markets it tracks, despite higher prices for crude oil, its main component.
In sugar, prices for the raw form of the commodity traded in New York plunged on worries that Brazil was headed for a huge crop in the new season.
Raw sugar's most active contract, May, ended down 1.84 cents, or 7 percent, at a 10-week low of 24.12 cents a lb. Reuters data showed that it was the biggest drop in a day for a second month contract on the market, since a 10.4 percent loss on March 17, 2008.
Since December, raw sugar has consistently traded above 25 cents a lb on fears that demand from India and other major consumers was squeezing the market. As February opened, the front-month contract, March, cracked the 30 cents per lb resistance long eyed by market bulls.
That run-up may be on hold for now as Brazil's center-south cane harvest gets underway, boosting production prospects for the No.1 sugar producer and exporter.
"I think we are due a sharp correction," said Abah Ofon, sugar analyst at Standard Chartered Bank.
"I don't side with the bulls who think sugar is going to stay above 25 cents," Ofon said. I think it is going to come down."
In coffee, the robusta grade for May delivery closed down $40, or 3.1 percent, at $1,263 a tonne in London. It had fallen earlier to $1,256 a tonne -- marking an eight-month low for a benchmark second month contract.
In New York, arabica coffee for May closed down 5.15 cents, or 3.8 percent, at $1.319 per lb -- the lowest price for the contract since Feb. 10.
Cotton futures finished near a two-year top as tight supplies in the United States and the steady appetite of investment funds fueled a rally in a market showing little signs of easing since last week.
The benchmark May cotton contract gained 0.72 cent to settle at 79.70 cents per lb.
Keith Brown, president of commodity firm Keith Brown and Co in Moultrie, Georgia, said cotton could soon top 80 cents, a target originally set for late March or early April.
On the currency side, the dollar extended the gains it scored last week after the U.S. Federal Reserve raised the rate it charges banks for emergency loans. Investors saw the Fed's move a potential end to the easy money regime that had fueled financial markets, including commodities.
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission said long bets on the dollar were at their highest levels since the week of Sept. 23, 2008.
A stronger dollar makes commodities priced in the currency costlier for users of money such as the euro.