Quarterly Outlook
Q3 Investor Outlook: Beyond American shores – why diversification is your strongest ally
Jacob Falkencrone
Global Head of Investment Strategy
Head of Commodity Strategy
The softs sector rallied this past week, with the Bloomberg Commodity Softs Index reaching a two-month high after a period of weakness. Price action was dominated by supply-side risks rather than any meaningful pickup in demand. Orange juice, arabica coffee, and sugar led the gains, while cotton also advanced on a tighter U.S. balance sheet. Across the board, weather scares and trade policy friction layered fresh premiums onto markets already running on thin supply buffers.
Orange juice futures climbed more than 9%, supporting an ongoing attempt to create a bottom near 200 cents per pound, a far cry from the 550 cents it reached last December, after traders priced in an above-normal Atlantic hurricane season, coinciding with historically weak U.S. citrus production. Florida’s 2024/25 orange crop is projected at its lowest level in more than a century, leaving little room to absorb weather-related disruptions. Brazil, the key foreign supplier to the U.S., has become even more critical, and recent policy developments have added uncertainty. While bulk juice imports were spared, new U.S. tariffs of 50% on certain Brazilian orange juice by-products—used in reconstituted blends—have complicated supply chains, raising costs and delivery risks. This mix of meteorological and political factors kept buyers willing to pay a premium for secure supply.
Arabica coffee futures, which recently slumped to an eight-month low at 277 cents per pound rose over 7% to 322 cents supported by early-week reports of light frost in parts of southern Minas Gerais and Cerrado Mineiro. While damage was minimal, the scare was amplified by low certified ICE exchange stocks, currently at 736,000 bags—below last year’s levels and roughly one-third under the five-year seasonal average—limiting the cushion against potential production hiccups. In addition, recently imposed U.S. tariffs on Brazilian imports have delayed shipments and clouded short-term U.S. supply prospects. Weather concerns, thin stocks, and trade friction combined to create a squeeze in nearby prices.
Sugar prices gained more than 5% on the week, with ICE October futures trading near 16.65 cents per pound after rebounding from a four-year low at the month’s start. Support came from Brazil’s center-south production data showing a 9% year-on-year drop through mid-July. The weaker-than-expected crush challenged the surplus narrative and caught a market where speculative short positions had recently reached a 2019 high of 111,000 contracts, equivalent to 5.6 million metric tons. The resulting short-covering sparked the week’s sharp move. India’s export restrictions remain for now, though expectations for possible easing in the 2025/26 season have yet to dampen the immediate bullish impact of Brazil’s softer output.
Cotton posted more modest gains after the August World Agriculture Supply and Demand Estimates Report (WASDE) cut U.S. production to 13.2 million bales and lowered ending stocks to 3.6 million bales. The reductions stemmed mainly from higher abandonment rates in the Southwest, despite a rise in the national yield projection. Globally, both output and stocks were revised down, tightening the market balance and lending support to prices. Reports from West Texas point to ongoing weather risk into harvest, keeping a weather premium in the market.
In all cases, the near-term direction will be driven less by demand changes and more by the interplay of weather risks, policy actions, and the thin supply cushions that make the softs sector prone to sharp, sentiment-driven moves.
More from the author |
---|
|