CBOT Oats Edge Higher While Black Sea Feed Prices Stay Flat

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CBOT oat futures are ticking moderately higher in very thin trade, while physical feed oat prices in the Black Sea remain flat, pointing to a cautious, mildly bearish fundamental backdrop rather than a true bull move.

Oat prices show a gentle firming on the front CBOT contracts, but the overall curve and physical indications in the Black Sea suggest a market still capped by comfortable supply expectations for 2026/27 and only limited nearby demand impulses. Weather risks for key North American and European oat regions appear mixed but not yet threatening, so the current uptick looks more like a technical correction from low levels than the start of a sustained rally. For now, buyers retain some timing flexibility, while sellers face a market that rewards patience and selective hedging rather than aggressive forward sales.

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📈 Prices & Curve Structure

The CBOT oat board on April 21, 2026 shows a slightly firmer nearby tone but still low absolute price levels and very limited liquidity:

Contract Last (US¢/bu) Chg (US¢) Chg (%) Approx. EUR/t*
May 2026 324.75 +2.00 +0.62% ≈ 112 EUR/t
Jul 2026 338.50 +2.50 +0.74% ≈ 117 EUR/t
Sep 2026 342.25 -0.25 -0.07% ≈ 119 EUR/t
Dec 2026 342.75 -0.50 -0.15% ≈ 119 EUR/t

*Indicative conversion using standard futures contract size and a rounded EUR/USD rate; for orientation only.

The nearby May and July 2026 contracts are modestly higher on the day, while the deferred 2026 positions are slightly softer, leaving the curve only mildly upward sloping from May into 2027. Open interest is concentrated in the front months but overall volumes are extremely low (single- to double-digit trades per contract), underlining that price moves are being driven by light positioning and technical flows rather than strong fundamental shifts.

On the physical side, Black Sea feed oats for delivery ex Odesa, Ukraine, are quoted around 0.24 EUR/kg (≈ 240 EUR/t) FCA and have been unchanged over the last three weeks. This stability confirms that nearby demand in the region remains subdued and that buyers are not yet forced to chase additional volume despite low global oat prices.

🌍 Supply & Demand Context

Fundamentally, the oat market remains shaped by expectations of a broadly comfortable global grain balance into 2026/27. Recent international grain balance updates point to adequate overall cereal availability, with oats benefiting indirectly from large wheat and feed grain supplies that cap substitution demand.  

Demand-side signals from both food and feed channels are relatively muted. Softness in broader livestock feed demand and ample alternative feed grains keep a lid on bids for feed-quality oats, especially in the Black Sea. The flat Ukrainian offer curve at 240 EUR/t FCA Odesa over several updates indicates a market where sellers accept current levels and buyers do not see urgency to step up, consistent with a sideways to mildly heavy tone.

🌦️ Weather & Crop Prospects

Weather patterns for spring 2026 across major North American and European grain belts are transitioning away from pronounced La Niña influences toward more neutral to slightly El Niño-like conditions. This shift typically brings a mix of regional dryness and warmth in parts of the U.S. Plains and Canadian Prairies, while much of Europe trends toward seasonally warm and mostly dry conditions that favor fieldwork but can raise moisture concerns if prolonged.

Recent outlooks for the next 6–10 days show patchy drought signals in some U.S. grain areas, but nothing yet clearly threatening to oat yield potential. For now, weather is neutral to slightly supportive for prices in a risk-premium sense: it argues against further sharp downside but does not yet justify a strong rally. Market participants should monitor emerging dryness in spring-sown oat regions closely in May, when yield prospects become more sensitive.

📊 Market Tone & Fundamentals

The combination of slightly firmer nearby CBOT futures, soft deferred contracts and flat Black Sea basis suggests a market in balance but with a cautious, mildly bearish undertone. Thin futures volumes and small daily price moves underline that speculative interest remains low and that oats are trading as a follower of broader grain and macro sentiment rather than on crop-specific headlines.

From a fundamental standpoint, the key factors limiting upside are: (1) anticipated adequate 2026/27 grain supplies, (2) weak feed demand in several importing regions, and (3) the availability of alternative feed grains at competitive prices. On the supportive side, current prices in EUR terms remain historically cheap, and any significant weather problem in North America or Northern Europe could quickly tighten the balance sheet for a relatively small crop like oats.

📆 Trading Outlook & 3‑Day View

  • For buyers (feed mills, integrators): Use current flat Black Sea prices near 240 EUR/t FCA Odesa to secure a portion of Q2–Q3 needs, but retain some volume open to benefit if the CBOT softness resumes and freight or local basis weakens.
  • For producers/exporters: The slight uptick in May/July CBOT values offers limited hedging opportunities; consider scaling in small hedge volumes on rallies, but avoid over-committing until weather risks around emergence and tillering are clearer.
  • For traders: The very low futures liquidity argues for cautious position sizing. Relative value trades versus other feed grains may offer better risk-reward than outright oat exposure in the short term.

3‑day directional outlook (in EUR terms, indicative):

  • CBOT Oats (front month, EUR/t): Slightly firmer to sideways, with an expected range of roughly 110–118 EUR/t as light buying meets weak follow-through.
  • Black Sea feed oats, FCA Odesa: Stable around 240 EUR/t; no strong drivers for immediate price change identified.
  • Basis & spreads: Little change expected; low liquidity and calm physical demand point to a continuation of the current narrow, slightly contangoed curve.

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