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Sugar prices drop as Trump predicts a de-escalation of the Iran War

Oil prices dropped sharply on Tuesday after U.S. president Donald Trump predicted that the Iran War could be over soon.

Dealers stated that the market was focused on the degree to which high energy costs could reduce sugar production in Brazil, where mills are able to adjust their factories to produce more sugar or ethanol depending on the market price for each.

The ICE exchange's raw sugar price?futures settled at 14.38 cents per lb after dropping nearly 3% earlier, while the white sugar futures dropped?0.5%, to $418.40 a metric tonne.

Petrobras is Brazil's state controlled oil company. It supplies around 80% the gasoline in Brazil. The prices have not yet been increased, but as long as the war with Iran continues, the more likely it will be.

The Brazilian gasoline market has a major impact on the prices of biofuel ethanol. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has said that sugar production in the United States will drop as a result of frosts hitting cane fields. Cocoa futures are rising in other soft commodity markets. Prices should be modestly recovering by the end of 2026 according to a survey.

London cocoa increased by?5.1% to?2,479 lbs per ton while New York cocoa grew 4.8% to $3.447 a tonne. The Ivory Coast Coffee and Cocoa Council sold over 400,000 tons worth of cocoa export contracts in just 10 days after exporters resumed purchasing for the mid-crop.

Arabica coffee dropped 0.4%, to $2.958 a pound, while robusta lost 2.1%, to $3,692 per ton. (Reporting and editing by May Angel; Nigel Hunt, Marcelo Teixeira)

(source: Reuters)