Oat Futures Hold Range as Physical Prices in Black Sea Edge Higher

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Oat futures are trading in a tight range on the CBoT while nearby contracts ease slightly, even as Black Sea feed oat offers in Ukraine tick higher, hinting at a modest firming of physical demand. Thin volumes and low open interest keep futures vulnerable to weather and acreage headlines rather than strong directional conviction.

After a generally quiet week in grains, oats remain the least liquid of the major Chicago contracts, with May and July 2026 trading inside a narrow band around 320–335 US¢/bu. The curve is modestly upward-sloping into 2027–28, suggesting the market is comfortable with current supply but wants a small carry to cover storage and risk. In the physical market, FCA Odesa feed oats have edged up by roughly 4% month‑on‑month in euro terms, signalling steady regional demand despite logistics and competition from other feed grains. Weather conditions in North America and acreage shifts in Canada and the US will be the key forward drivers rather than current spot fundamentals.

📈 Prices & Term Structure

On April 24, 2026, CBoT oat futures show a flat-to-gently-carrying curve around 320–349 US¢/bu. The front May 2026 contract last traded at 320.00 US¢/bu, marginally lower on the day (−0.50 ¢, −0.16%), with just 3 lots traded and open interest at 746. July 2026 settled at 334.75 US¢/bu, up 1.25 ¢ (+0.37%), with similarly thin volume.

Further out, September 2026 and December 2026 printed last trades at 341.25 and 339.75 US¢/bu respectively, both up 1.25 ¢ (+0.37%), indicating a mild carry into the new-crop period. The 2027–28 strip continues this pattern in low-liquidity trades, with indicative levels mostly between 333 and 349 US¢/bu. Commercial interest remains limited, and price discovery is heavily influenced by a small number of trades rather than broad hedging flow.

Contract Last (US¢/bu) Change (US¢) Change (%) Approx. Price (EUR/t)
May 2026 320.00 -0.50 -0.16% ≈ 193 EUR/t
Jul 2026 334.75 +1.25 +0.37% ≈ 202 EUR/t
Sep 2026 341.25 +1.25 +0.37% ≈ 206 EUR/t
Dec 2026 339.75 +1.25 +0.37% ≈ 205 EUR/t

Note: EUR/t values are approximate, based on standard oat bushel-to-tonne conversion and a recent EUR/USD rate close to 1.07.

🌍 Physical Market & Regional Differentials

In the Black Sea region, indicative FCA Odesa prices for non-organic feed oats (98% purity) from Ukraine have moved from about 0.24 EUR/kg at the end of March to 0.25 EUR/kg by April 23, 2026. That corresponds to roughly 250 EUR/t and marks a ~4% increase over the past month. The step up suggests firmer local demand or slightly tighter supply in the Ukrainian feed segment, even as global futures remain range-bound.

Compared with the CBoT May–July strip (roughly 193–202 EUR/t equivalent before freight and basis), Black Sea quotations imply a positive regional basis, reflecting both logistics out of Odesa and ongoing risk premia related to the Black Sea corridor. For European and Mediterranean buyers, Ukrainian feed oats remain competitive versus domestic options, but any further rise in freight or risk premiums could quickly narrow this advantage.

📊 Fundamentals & Acreage Signals

Market participants continue to lean on the traditional “follow oats” signal for broader grain sentiment, but current prices around 3.20–3.35 USD/bu indicate a largely neutral stance rather than a strong bullish or bearish view. A recent US grains commentary notes July oat futures have been range-bound for most of April, capped near 3.45 USD/bu and supported around 3.35 USD/bu, underscoring the lack of clear directional conviction.

On the supply side, preliminary North American acreage expectations point to a slight decline in oat plantings in Canada for 2026/27, as farmers shift area towards barley amid better relative economics. A recent Canadian acreage report signals barley up about 5% while oat area edges lower, which could tighten oat balances modestly in the medium term if realized and if yields do not overperform.

🌦 Weather & Crop Progress

Weather conditions across the Canadian Prairies and US Northern Plains remain a key watchpoint. Recent precipitation maps show mixed moisture across Western Canada, with some ongoing dryness in parts of the western Prairies, although the current El Niño pattern may gradually improve moisture availability later in the season.

The latest Weekly Weather and Crop Bulletin indicates oats planting in key US regions is progressing but still sensitive to temperature swings and localized soil moisture deficits. With oat futures liquidity thin, any weather scare affecting early crop development or yield expectations could have an outsized impact on nearby contracts and basis levels, particularly where local stocks are already tight.

📆 Trading Outlook & Strategy

  • For producers: The mild carry from May to new-crop months offers limited reward for extended storage. Consider layering in small-scale hedges on July and September 2026 around current levels, while retaining some upside exposure in case acreage cuts and weather tighten the balance sheet.
  • For consumers/feed buyers: Ukrainian FCA Odesa offers near 250 EUR/t remain attractive versus Chicago-equivalent values once freight and risk premia are accounted for. Securing a portion of Q2–Q3 needs now, while maintaining flexibility for weather-related dips in futures, appears prudent.
  • For traders: Given the very low volume and open interest in oats, focus on relative value rather than outright directional bets – for example, monitoring oat–barley or oat–wheat spreads, particularly if Canadian barley acreage increases further and oat plantings shrink.

📉 Short-Term Price Indication (3-Day)

  • CBoT oats (nearby May/Jul): Likely to remain within the recent 320–335 US¢/bu band (≈ 193–202 EUR/t), with intraday volatility driven more by wider grain market sentiment than oats-specific news.
  • Black Sea FCA Odesa feed oats: Stable to slightly firm around 0.25 EUR/kg (≈ 250 EUR/t) over the next few days, barring abrupt changes in regional logistics or currency.
  • Deferred CBoT contracts (Sep–Dec 2026): Mild upward bias within 205–210 EUR/t equivalent if weather headlines or acreage data confirm a modest tightening in 2026/27 supply.