Corn Market Supported by Firm US Exports and Weather Risks in the Corn Belt

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US corn is drawing support from solid export demand and emerging weather risks in the Corn Belt, while a softer euro underpins Euronext prices. Globally, slightly lower production expectations and modestly tighter stocks point to a gradually firming fundamental backdrop rather than an acute supply squeeze.

Corn markets are currently balancing strong nearby demand with only marginally looser medium‑term supplies. Export activity from the US remains robust, even if last week’s sales dipped from recent highs, and forward sales into 2026/27 are already outperforming expectations. At the same time, the International Grains Council (IGC) has trimmed its global production outlook for 2026/27, tightening ending stocks. In the near term, forecasts for increased rainfall across the US Corn Belt raise concerns about delayed planting, adding a weather‑risk premium. In Europe, a weaker euro is amplifying gains on Euronext, while physical offers in Europe and the Black Sea show a slightly firmer tone.

📈 Prices & Market Tone

Euronext corn futures are trading slightly higher, supported by currency weakness and weather concerns in the US, with recent sessions showing modest gains after earlier consolidation. Physical offers mirror this firmer tone: French yellow corn FOB Paris is indicated around EUR 0.24/kg, up from EUR 0.23/kg a week earlier, while Ukrainian feed corn FCA Odesa has ticked up to about EUR 0.25/kg for higher‑grade feed versus EUR 0.24/kg previously. Brazilian and Argentine popcorn values have also nudged higher over the month, reflecting steady specialty demand.

Origin Product Term Latest price (EUR/kg) 1 week ago (EUR/kg)
France (Paris) Corn, yellow FOB 0.24 0.23
Ukraine (Odesa) Corn, yellow feed, 14.5% max moisture FCA 0.25 0.24
Ukraine (Odesa) Corn FOB 0.17 0.17
Brazil → NL Popcorn FCA 0.75 0.74
Argentina Popcorn 40/42 FOB 0.82 0.81

🌍 Supply & Demand Drivers

US export demand is the central near‑term pillar for prices. Weekly export sales for the week to 16 April reached 1.316 million tonnes, a three‑week low but still 14% above last year’s level. South Korea (345,700 t), Japan (324,200 t) and unknown destinations (233,600 t) accounted for the bulk of the volumes, underlining continued strong Asian demand. New‑crop sales of 440,110 t, all to Mexico, marked the second‑highest weekly volume of the marketing year and comfortably beat trader expectations.

This pattern – slightly softer week‑on‑week but strong versus history and trade ideas – keeps US corn export books on a constructive trajectory, echoed by independent data showing combined old and new crop sales last week remained well above the recent four‑week average. South Korean buyers also secured an additional 134,000 t of corn in private deals, spotlighting consumers’ willingness to lock in coverage on dips.

📊 Fundamentals & IGC Outlook

The International Grains Council has cut its forecast for 2026/27 global corn production by 3 million tonnes versus March, to 1.3 billion tonnes – about 24 million tonnes below the previous year, though still the second‑largest crop on record. Ending stocks in 2026/27 are now placed at 292 million tonnes, 2 million tonnes lower month‑on‑month and 15 million tonnes below the end of 2025/26, while global consumption is expected to rise by 8 million tonnes to 1.315 billion tonnes.

Latest IGC commentary confirms this tightening tendency: world grains output in 2026/27 is projected to fall around 2%, with corn output near 1.303 billion tonnes and stocks edging lower compared with 2025/26. While the absolute level of production remains historically high, the combination of slightly lower output, growing demand and falling stocks points to a gradually tighter balance sheet, limiting downside for prices unless demand slows materially or weather delivers a substantial yield surprise.

🌦️ Weather & Planting Outlook

Market attention is shifting strongly toward US planting conditions. Traders are increasingly concerned that corn sowing in the Corn Belt could be delayed, as forecasts signal above‑normal precipitation across the Midwest and surrounding regions over the coming 5–7 days and into the 6–10‑day outlook window. Recent severe weather episodes and storm systems traversing the Plains and Midwest underline how unsettled the pattern remains, reinforcing expectations of fieldwork interruptions.

At this stage, the risk premium is more about timing than yield loss: prolonged delays into May would be needed to materially threaten potential yields. However, given the already slightly tighter global outlook for 2026/27, even moderate planting delays are enough to keep speculative interest on the long side and discourage aggressive selling by producers.

📌 Trading Outlook & Strategy

  • For importers/feed buyers: Use current levels to secure a portion of Q3–Q4 2026 coverage, especially from Ukraine and France, as prices around EUR 0.17–0.25/kg still look attractive against a gradually tightening global balance. Consider staggered buying to take advantage of any short‑term weather‑driven pullbacks.
  • For producers/exporters: Maintain a cautiously bullish bias. Strong US export demand and the IGC’s softer production and stock projections argue against heavy forward selling; favor scaled‑up hedging on rallies rather than at current base levels.
  • For traders/speculators: The combination of firm exports, wetter Corn Belt forecasts and modestly tighter fundamentals supports a buy‑on‑dips strategy, with close monitoring of weekly US export data and 6–14‑day weather trends for timing adjustments.

📆 Short-Term Price Direction (3-Day View)

  • Euronext Corn (Paris): Slightly bullish bias; further modest gains likely if the euro stays weak and US futures hold their recent recovery.
  • Black Sea/Ukraine Physical: Stable to slightly firmer; feed corn offers are expected to remain well‑supported by competitive demand and freight advantages.
  • US Futures (CBOT reference): Mild upside skew, with volatility tied to updated planting progress and rainfall forecasts in the Corn Belt; sharp reversals possible if the weather window improves unexpectedly.