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Orange Juice Stuck in Worst Rout in Five Decades as Demand Sinks

Orange-juice futures in New York are heading for a 15th straight day of losses.

Orange Juice Stuck in Worst Rout in Five Decades as Demand Sinks
Bottles of Robinsons orange fruit drink, produced by Britvic Plc, pass along the production line at the company’s factory in Norwich, U.K. (Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg)  

(Bloomberg) -- Orange-juice futures in New York are heading for a 15th straight day of losses, the worst rout in records back to 1967.

U.S. demand for the juice has been weakening for years. Add that to a declining citrus crop in Florida, the top domestic grower, and you’ve got a recipe for shrinking investor interest as fewer people want to use futures to hedge. Prices have slumped about 17 percent this month.

Orange Juice Stuck in Worst Rout in Five Decades as Demand Sinks

The liquidity drain has also sapped market swings: 60-day historical volatility for most-active futures is at the lowest since November 2014. Even though Florida’s harvest is forecast by the government to drop to the smallest in 73 years, surging imports of frozen concentrate juice from suppliers like Brazil and Mexico are making up for the losses.

To contact the reporter on this story: Marvin G. Perez in New York at mperez71@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Simon Casey at scasey4@bloomberg.net, Millie Munshi, Steven Frank

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