Wheat futures stabilize at low levels as new-crop risk premium builds

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Wheat futures on both sides of the Atlantic are trading sideways at comparatively low levels, with only a modest upward carry into 2027–2028 reflecting weather and geopolitical risk rather than acute tightness in nearby supply. Cash FOB indications in France, the US and Ukraine remain stable, confirming a broadly balanced physical market where buyers are patient and sellers show limited pressure.

After recent declines, Euronext and CBOT wheat have entered a consolidation phase. Nearby MATIF May 2026 holds around EUR 196/t, while new-crop September trades just above EUR 205/t, pointing to a flat but slightly upward-sloping curve. Chicago May 2026 hovers near 585 USc/bu (~EUR 215/t equivalent), marginally firmer than the previous day. ICE feed wheat in the UK gained around 1.5–1.8% on Friday, supported by currency and local demand, but still signals comfortable availability. Physical quotes for FOB wheat out of Paris, Washington and Odesa have been unchanged for several days, underlining the current equilibrium in spot fundamentals.

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📈 Prices & Term Structure

The Euronext wheat curve remains low and slightly upward sloping. Front-month May 2026 trades at about EUR 195.75/t, with September 2026 at EUR 205.50/t and December 2026 at EUR 213.25/t. The premium into 2027–2028 is modest, with March 2027 at EUR 218.25/t and March 2028 around EUR 227–235/t, indicating only limited long-term scarcity risk priced in.

On CBOT, May 2026 stands at 584.50 USc/bu (roughly EUR 215/t), with July 2026 at 593.50 USc/bu and December 2026 at 622.75 USc/bu, showing a normal carry structure. ICE UK feed wheat closed at around GBP 176–182/t for nearby months, equivalent to roughly EUR 200–207/t, after daily gains of 1.5–1.8%. The overall picture is of low absolute price levels by recent historical standards, with mild risk premia toward the outer contracts.

Contract / Market Price (EUR/t) Change vs. prev. day
MATIF Wheat May 2026 ≈ 196 0%
MATIF Wheat Sep 2026 ≈ 206 0%
CBOT Wheat May 2026 (EUR eq.) ≈ 215 +0.4%
ICE Feed Wheat May 2026 (EUR eq.) ≈ 200 +1.6%

🌍 Physical Market & Regional Differentials

Physical offers confirm the futures picture of calm and balanced conditions. FOB wheat (min. 11% protein) out of France (Paris) is quoted around EUR 0.29/kg, i.e. roughly EUR 290/t, stable over recent weeks. US-origin wheat (CBOT-type, min. 11.5% protein) FOB Washington, D.C. trades near EUR 0.21/kg (~EUR 210/t) without notable week‑on‑week movement.

Ukrainian wheat remains the most aggressively priced origin. FOB Odesa offers are around EUR 0.18–0.19/kg (EUR 180–190/t) for 11–12.5% protein, while FCA values in Kyiv and Odesa range from about EUR 0.23–0.25/kg depending on protein and location. These stable differentials highlight Ukraine’s continued competitiveness in export markets and help cap upside in European and US benchmarks as long as logistics remain functional.

📊 Fundamentals & Market Drivers

The flat nearby curve and stable cash indications point to comfortable stocks and unaggressive demand. The lack of intraday movement in MATIF contracts on 13 April, with closing changes at 0%, underscores the absence of fresh fundamental shocks. Similarly, modest gains of around 0.3–0.4% on CBOT contracts on 14 April suggest only light short covering or technical buying rather than a change in supply outlook.

The term structure into 2027–2028 embeds a modest weather and geopolitical risk premium. Higher prices in more distant expiries align with uncertainty around future Black Sea export capacity and potential weather disruptions in key producing regions. However, the relatively narrow spread between May 2026 (~EUR 196/t) and March 2028 (~EUR 227–235/t) implies the market does not yet foresee a severe tightening of global wheat balances.

🌦️ Weather & Short-Term Outlook

For the coming days, weather in major Northern Hemisphere wheat regions is a key watchpoint as crops approach critical development stages. With prices at comparatively low levels, any signals of sustained dryness or cold damage in Europe, the Black Sea or US Plains could quickly translate into a risk‑on move, steepening the forward curve. Conversely, broadly favourable conditions would likely preserve the current sideways pattern.

Given current pricing and stable physical quotes, the base case remains for range‑bound trade in the very short term. Volatility may pick up on fresh weather model runs or geopolitical headlines, but without a clear trigger, the market is inclined to consolidate near current levels.

📆 Trading Outlook & 3‑Day Directional View

  • For buyers (millers, feed compounders): Current levels on MATIF and in Ukrainian FOB/FCA markets offer attractive coverage opportunities for nearby and early new‑crop needs. Consider layering in incremental hedges rather than waiting for further downside.
  • For sellers (farmers, cooperatives): The modest carry into 2027–2028 rewards deferred sales somewhat, but premiums are limited. Producers may combine partial forward sales with options or flexible pricing tools to retain upside in case of weather‑driven rallies.
  • For speculative traders: The low and stable price environment favours range‑trading strategies with tight risk management. Upside optionality could be attractive if weather or Black Sea risks escalate, but timing remains critical.
Market Horizon (3 days) Directional Bias
MATIF Wheat (nearby) 15–17 April 2026 Slightly firmer to sideways, with support near current lows
CBOT Wheat (nearby) 15–17 April 2026 Sideways, modest upward bias on technical buying
Black Sea FOB (Ukraine) 15–17 April 2026 Stable, highly competitive vs. EU/US origins

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