ICE sugar futures plunged on Friday to the lowest in over 15 months, in the largest decline over a two-week period since May 2011, as sell-stops exaggerated speculator selling as prices slid through chart support and bearish fundamentals weighed. Arabica coffee and cocoa on ICE Futures U.S. were also down. SUGAR * July raw sugar settled down 0.49 cent, or 3.4 percent, at 13.74 cents per lb after falling to 13.63 cents, the lowest level for the front-month since February 2016. * Benchmark prices finished the week down 8.7 percent on the heels of last week's decline of over 8 percent. * August white sugar settled down $11.80, or 2.8 percent, at $410.3 per tonne, also falling to $408.40, the lowest level since March 2016. * "(I)f you were bullish, 'brutal' would be a good way to describe the sugar market's performance today," said Agrilion Research Advisors in an emailed note, noting weakness in the premium of refined sugar futures over raws. * Fundamental indicators continued to weigh, with growing expectations of a recovery in Indian production fuelling worries about a sizeable surplus emerging in the 2017-18 season that begins in October. * Heavy rains in Brazil, which recently sent the market rallying on worries about short-term crop disruptions, are also likely to benefit output in the longer term, adding further to worries about over-supply. * Ukraine's emergence as a player in the world sugar market, boasting cheap prices and an expanding global reach, could restrict the European Union's ambitions to regain its position as a major exporter after it liberalizes its market this year. COFFEE * Front-month July arabica futures settled down 2.15 cent, or 1.7 percent, at $1.2555 per lb after dipping to a one-year low $1.2525 amid what dealers said was technical weakness and weak buying in the cash market this week. *Softs commodities were under pressure from fund selling and weaker U.S. dollar, traders said. * Honduran coffee exports jumped 51.2 percent in May from the same month last season due to an increase in output, the national coffee institute said on Thursday. * July robusta coffee finished unchanged from the previous session at $1,981 per tonne. COCOA * July London cocoa settled down 17 pounds, or 1.1 percent, at 1,554 pounds per tonne. * July New York cocoa settled down $23, or 1.1 percent, at $2,001 per tonne.