Barley Market: Flat Nearby Prices, Emerging Risk Premium on Forward Curve

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Barley prices are currently stable on nearby positions but the forward curve is starting to price in more risk, especially beyond 2026, as uncertainty over future crops, logistics and input costs grows. Old-crop availability remains comfortable, yet export dynamics in wheat and corn and weather risks in key regions are quietly reshaping the outlook for feed barley demand and pricing.

In the short term, the barley market is taking its cues from the broader grain complex: tightness concerns for U.S. and Black Sea wheat contrast with burdensome old-crop wheat stocks in the EU, while Ukrainian feed grains remain competitively priced but tightly managed by minimum export pricing rules. For barley, this translates into steady spot prices at the Black Sea and in the EU, with only modest gains on distant futures as buyers and hedgers pay up for longer-term cover. [cmb_offer ids=438,437,764]

📈 Prices & Forward Curve

Australian SFE feed barley futures show a flat nearby structure around AUD 315–321/t for May–Nov 2026, stepping up to AUD 330–340/t in early 2027 and further to about AUD 356/t by January 2028–29, indicating a clear risk premium on longer-dated contracts.

Using an indicative rate of 1 AUD ≈ 0.60 EUR, nearby SFE levels translate to roughly EUR 190–195/t, while the far curve implies around EUR 210–215/t. These values are broadly aligned with current Black Sea and EU export indications.

Contract Exchange Price (local) Approx. price (EUR/t)
May 2026 SFE feed barley 315 AUD/t ≈ 190 EUR/t
Jan 2027 SFE feed barley 330 AUD/t ≈ 198 EUR/t
Mar 2027 SFE feed barley 340 AUD/t ≈ 204 EUR/t
Jan 2028–29 SFE feed barley 356 AUD/t ≈ 214 EUR/t

Physical Ukrainian barley offers are consistent with this picture: feed barley seeds are quoted around EUR 0.23–0.24/kg FCA Kyiv and Odesa (≈ EUR 230–240/t) and about EUR 0.19/kg FOB Odesa (≈ EUR 190/t), largely unchanged in recent weeks but well supported by firm external demand and managed export flows .

🌍 Supply & Demand Drivers

Wheat continues to set the tone for global feed grain pricing. U.S. wheat is supported by persistent dryness in the southern Plains, while EU old-crop wheat faces pressure from high carry-in stocks and sluggish exports. With only two and a half months left in the 2025/26 marketing year, the EU still has a significant export gap to close, raising doubts whether the official export target can be fully achieved.

Russia remains highly competitive on wheat, having shipped around 1.1 million tonnes in early April alone and signaling strong export capacity, even if the pace may slow slightly later in the month. At the same time, recent USDA weekly export data for U.S. wheat show sales in line with expectations, suggesting no dramatic demand shock but steady baseline consumption.

For barley, strong overseas feed demand continues to underpin trade flows. Previous tender activity has shown robust interest from key MENA buyers, and more recently demand from China and Turkey has helped support Ukrainian barley, where farmer selling has been limited by uncertainty over the new harvest and crop conditions after winter . This combination of restrained farm sales and consistent export interest helps to explain the stable to slightly firmer tone in Black Sea barley values.

📊 Fundamentals & Regional Outlook

In Ukraine, domestic and export-oriented barley prices have firmed compared with early in the season, reflecting gradually tightening old-crop supplies. Analysts note that farmers have slowed sales not only of barley, but also of wheat and rapeseed, preferring to wait for clearer signals on the 2026 harvest and potential weather-related losses .

At the same time, Europe’s grain balance is shifting. The latest crop outlook points to an EU-27+UK barley harvest of about 59.3 million tonnes in 2026, below last year’s 63.6 million tonnes, even though the forecast was revised slightly higher compared with earlier estimates . This suggests less comfortable barley availability next season, particularly if export demand stays strong and alternative feed grains like corn and wheat remain well bid.

In the Black Sea, Ukraine’s role as a competitive feed grain supplier continues, but export logistics and policy constraints (including minimum export price mechanisms and ongoing infrastructure risks) add uncertainty and justify part of the risk premium observed on the forward curve. For now, old-crop barley supplies at ports appear adequate to meet both export and domestic feed demand, consistent with the stable spot price environment .

🌦️ Weather Snapshot (Key Growing Regions)

Weather conditions are becoming more important as the Northern Hemisphere crop moves through spring. In the U.S., ongoing dryness in the southern Plains is a bullish influence on wheat and, by extension, on the broader feed grain complex.

Across the Black Sea region, seasonal forecasts for April–June 2026 point to above-average rainfall for large parts of Ukraine and southern Russia, which would generally be supportive for barley and other winter grains if realized . In the EU, conditions are more mixed, but overall soil moisture in many key barley regions is adequate, with some localized risks from excessive rainfall or storms rather than drought.

📆 Short-Term Market & Trading Outlook

With spot barley prices stable and the forward curve mildly upward sloping, the market is signaling comfortable nearby availability but growing concern about production and logistics risks into 2027–2028. Competitive Russian and Ukrainian wheat, along with firm demand for corn, will continue to act as key benchmarks for feed barley valuation.

  • Producers: Consider incremental hedging on 2027–2028 production via futures or forward contracts, taking advantage of the existing risk premium on the far curve while keeping some volume open in case of weather-driven rallies.
  • Feed buyers: For old-crop and early new-crop coverage, use current flat prices to lock in a base layer of supply, but avoid over-committing far forward where weather and policy risks remain elevated.
  • Exporters & traders: Monitor wheat and corn export flows closely; any acceleration in EU or Black Sea wheat exports, or stronger Chinese buying of feed grains, could quickly translate into tighter barley availability and higher replacement costs.

📉 3-Day Regional Price Indication (Directional, in EUR)

  • Black Sea (Ukraine, FOB feed barley): ≈ EUR 190/t – expected sideways to slightly firmer given steady demand and limited farmer selling .
  • Ukraine, inland FCA (Kyiv/Odesa feed barley): ≈ EUR 230–240/t – likely sideways as current prices already reflect export parity and domestic feed demand.
  • EU export hubs (e.g., French feed barley FOB): ≈ EUR 210–220/t (indicative) – bias sideways, but with upside risk if EU wheat exports accelerate or new-crop yield prospects deteriorate.

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