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Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Sugar imports unlikely as prices dip

 INDIA may not need white sugar imports at zero duty and imports of raws may be lower than earlier expected as local prices have fallen, Union food and agriculture minister Sharad Pawar said on Wednesday, pushing futures prices down.
    Soaring local prices ahead of general elections scheduled in April and May had encouraged the government to ease import rules for raw sugar last month. Traders had speculated the government may also scrap the 60% import duty on white sugar, but Mr Pawar said this may not be necessary as prices had fallen.
    Sugar in the spot markets of
Maharashtra, the top producer, has retreated 9% from this year's peak of Rs 2,181 per 100 kg on February 3. "If the situation continues, we may not require to import white sugar," Mr Pawar said. Lower prices had also hit raw sugar imports, he said.
    Raw and white sugar futures fell after the minister's comments. "It's no surprise the market is lower," said Nick Hungate, a soft commodities trader with Rabobank in London. Benchmark ICE May raw sugar futures were down 0.2 cent, or 1.7%, at 12.78 cents per pound at 17:00 pm IST, while London May white sugar was down $6.8, or 1.7%, at $391.2 per tonne.
    Mr Pawar said country's sugar output in the year to September would
touch 16 million tonnes, above the Indian Sugar Mills Association's expectation of 15.5 million tonnes. He also said sugar stocks at October 1 last year, the start of the current season, were 10 million tonnes, higher than trade body estimates of 8 million tonnes. Mr Pawar said for the next four weeks he would be campaigning for general elections, leaving little room for any major policy initiatives in the farm sector. By the time the new government assumes office in the middle of May, the country would have completed purchases of new season wheat from farmers.
    Analysts say prices have fallen due to a government decision to impose limits on stocks to be held by traders, forcing them to increase supply in the market.
SWEET NOTE
In Maharashtra, spot sugar price has retreated 9% from this year's peak of Rs 2,181 per 100 kg on February 3 Sugar output is expected to touch 16 million tonnes, as against ISMA's expectation of 15.5 mt


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