Rapeseed futures remain firm, with nearby physical premiums underpinned by tight EU supply and a strong crude oil complex amid ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Persian Gulf. Forward Euronext contracts trade in a much lower band than the spot market, reflecting expectations of supply relief in coming seasons but also weather and import risks.
Rapeseed trade continues to draw support from rising crude oil prices and a still‑unresolved confrontation involving the US and Iran. Disruptions to oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz are tightening global energy balances and underpinning vegetable oil markets. In the EU, cash prices for old-crop rapeseed have moved only slightly higher but remain elevated as crushers compete for limited supplies and imports lag well behind last season. North American oilseed markets are mixed: fast US soybean planting weighs on beans, but firmer soyoil and weather risks in Canada continue to lend support to canola and indirectly to rapeseed.
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📈 Prices & Spreads
Nearby Euronext rapeseed (May 2026) is indicated around EUR 663/t, with the main new-crop August 2026 contract near EUR 513/t and November 2026 at about EUR 515/t. The forward curve remains steeply inverted between May and August, signalling pronounced tightness in old-crop supply versus expectations of some normalization next season.
On the cash side, EU crushers are now paying up to roughly EUR 545/t for old-crop seed, only modestly above recent levels but well supported by the scarce availability. Ukrainian FCA offers cluster around EUR 600–610/t equivalent, and French FOB indications near Paris are about EUR 570/t, showing a relatively tight but stable regional structure.
| Contract / Market | Indicative Level (EUR/t) | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Euronext May 2026 | 663 | Nearby, reflecting acute tightness |
| Euronext Aug 2026 | 513 | Main new‑crop benchmark |
| EU cash old crop (mills) | up to 545 | Premium to futures, scarce sellers |
| Ukraine FCA (Kyiv/Odesa) | ~600–610 | Export‑oriented offers |
| France FOB Paris | ~570 | Aligns with MATIF new‑crop |
🌍 Supply & Demand Drivers
EU rapeseed supply is tight as old-crop stocks run down and imports lag. EU rapeseed imports so far this season (to 24 April) total 4.12 million tonnes, 46% below last year. The European Commission still projects 5.5 million tonnes of imports for 2025/26; to meet this by 30 June, arrivals must accelerate sharply in the coming weeks, implying continued strong import demand and support for export origins.
At the same time, crushers’ demand remains solid, sustained by biodiesel mandates and attractive crush margins versus alternative oils. Limited farmer selling and low on‑farm stocks keep spot availability constrained. This imbalance explains the firm cash market and the strong nearby MATIF premium over forward positions, despite expectations of better harvest prospects in the medium term.
📊 External Markets & Fundamentals
The rapeseed complex is drawing additional strength from the energy market. Negotiations between the US and Iran show no visible progress, while obstacles to shipping in the Strait of Hormuz are restricting oil flows and tightening global crude supply. Higher crude prices in turn raise biodiesel values and support the broader vegetable oil complex, including rapeseed oil.
In the US, soybean futures are under mild pressure from rapid planting progress: 23% of the area is already sown, slightly above market expectations and well ahead of the five‑year average of 12%. However, soyoil futures on the CBOT have pushed to fresh contract highs in step with the stronger crude market. Canadian canola in Winnipeg has followed this strength, with nearby contracts up around 0.7–1.5% on the day, adding a supportive external reference for European rapeseed.
🌦 Weather & Crop Outlook
Weather risk is emerging in Western Canada, where farmers are preparing to plant canola. Large parts of western Canada remain unusually cold, and further significant rainfall could slow fieldwork and translate into yield risk for the 2026 crop. Over the next three days, temperatures around Winnipeg are forecast to stay chilly, mostly in the mid‑single digits Celsius with occasional flurries and persistent cloud, offering little help to soil warming.
In contrast, conditions in Western Europe are currently favourable. Around Paris, the coming days are expected to be very mild to warm, with highs around 25°C and plenty of sunshine, only turning a bit more unsettled with some showers toward the end of the period. This pattern supports ongoing crop development in France and neighbouring countries, although yield outcomes will still depend on late‑spring rainfall and summer temperature patterns.
📆 Trading Outlook & Strategy
- Producers (EU): Maintain a patient selling strategy for remaining old‑crop volumes; current cash levels around EUR 545/t are historically attractive, but tight stocks and import needs argue against aggressive forward sales of new crop unless weather turns clearly favourable.
- Crushers: Consider securing additional nearby coverage while the futures curve remains sharply inverted and imports are slow; basis risk is skewed to the upside if arrivals do not accelerate.
- Importers/Consumers: Use any pullbacks driven by broader oilseed weakness (e.g. from fast US soybean planting) to extend coverage into Q4 2026, as geopolitical and Canadian weather risks could reprice the market higher later in the season.
📉 3‑Day Price Indication (Directional)
- MATIF Rapeseed (front months): Slightly firmer bias, supported by crude oil strength and tight EU nearby supply.
- EU Cash Old Crop (mills, delivered): Steady to slightly higher, with limited farmer selling and ongoing crusher demand.
- Black Sea / Ukraine FCA: Mostly steady in EUR terms, with mild downside risk if logistics improve and import pace into the EU picks up.



