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Suedzucker reports 82% slump in second quarter earnings amid weak sugar market

Suedzucker said its core sugar sector made a second quarter operating loss of €33m compared to an operating profit of €13m in last year's second quarter
Suedzucker said its core sugar sector made a second quarter operating loss of €33m compared to an operating profit of €13m in last year's second quarter

Europe's largest sugar producer Suedzucker has today reported an 82% fall in quarterly operating profit as it continued to face weak EU sugar markets.

The German company said operating profit in June-August, the second quarter of its 2025/26 fiscal year, totalled €20m, down from €114m the same quarter the previous year.

Cost reductions were not enough to compensate for low sugar prices in the European Union while exports also fell, it said.

Suedzucker confirmed its reduced forecast of full-year 2025/26 operating profits of between €100-200m, down from €350m last year.

Suedzucker's core sugar sector made a second quarter operating loss of €33m compared to an operating profit of €13m in last year’s second quarter.

EU data says average EU sugar prices fell to €534 a metric ton in July 2025 from €775 in July 2024 although the EU restricted cheap Ukrainian sugar imports following protests by farmers.

"EU sugar prices remain under pressure and the market environment therefore remains challenging," a Suedzucker spokesperson said.

"This is despite EU restrictions on sugar imports from Ukraine. The EU now plans to increase again the permitted import volume from Ukraine to 100,000 (metric) tons," the spokesperson added.

Suedzucker said that with market conditions remaining difficult, it still expects a loss in the sugar sector in the second half of the year.

"We have reduced our sugar beet planted area this season to compensate for this, and figures show other European producers have done so too," the spokesperson added.

"But growing conditions for beets are better than expected leading to expectations of higher crop yields, which could reduce some of the benefits of the reduced crop area," they stated.