Brazil–UK bean prices flat as weather risks build in Brasília

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Bean markets in Brazil and the UK are entering mid‑March 2026 in an unusually calm price pattern, even as background fundamentals grow more complex. In Brazil, FOB offers from Brasília for Alubia and dark red kidney beans have been unchanged for at least four consecutive weekly prints, reflecting a short‑term balance between tight domestic stocks and a more comfortable global supply backdrop. Official and industry data show that Brazil’s dry bean sector has pivoted toward export-oriented varieties in recent seasons, with 2025 bean shipments rising sharply in both volume and value and a growing share of black, mung and specialty beans heading to Asia and the Middle East. At the same time, domestic market reports highlight low inventories and the lingering risk of price spikes if new‑crop flows are disrupted.

Weather is a key short‑term risk. Around Brasília, 3‑day forecasts call for warm, humid conditions with recurring thunderstorms and official heavy‑rain alerts, a pattern that can slow late‑cycle fieldwork and logistics if downpours persist. In the UK, by contrast, FOB London prices for fava, broad and other beans are also flat week‑on‑week amid cool, mostly cloudy spring weather and steady but unspectacular import demand from EU and Mediterranean buyers. Against this backdrop, freight markets remain relatively firm on major grain and oilseed routes out of Brazil, keeping export parity under mild pressure when combined with a stronger real and elevated logistics costs. For bean traders focused on Brazil–UK flows, the net result is a sideways price structure in the very short term, but with a slightly bullish skew for Brazilian origins if heavy rains interfere with supply or if domestic restocking accelerates as retailers rebuild shelves through March.

📈 Prices – Current FOB benchmarks (all in EUR)

Note: Source prices are quoted in USD FOB and converted at an indicative 1.00 USD = 0.92 EUR for this report.

BR – Brasília FOB beans (BRL→USD internal, shown here in EUR equivalent)

Commodity Type Origin Location Terms Last price (USD) Last price (EUR) Weekly change Sentiment Last update
Alubia beans White BR Brasília FOB 1.35 1.24 0.0% w/w Sideways / mildly firm 2026‑03‑14
Kidney beans Dark red BR Brasília FOB 1.41 1.30 0.0% w/w Sideways 2026‑03‑14
Kidney beans Brown eye BR Brasília FOB 1.36 1.25 0.0% w/w Sideways 2026‑03‑14

GB – London FOB beans

Commodity Type Origin Location Terms Last price (USD) Last price (EUR) Weekly change Sentiment Last update
Kidney beans White, 99% purity GB London FOB 1.34 1.23 0.0% w/w Sideways 2026‑03‑14
German beans Split GB London FOB 0.94 0.86 0.0% w/w Sideways / soft 2026‑03‑14
Fava beans Sortex, small GB London FOB 1.16 1.07 0.0% w/w Balanced 2026‑03‑14
Beans dried Split, 12 mm, 98% GB London FOB 1.59 1.46 0.0% w/w Firm – niche demand 2026‑03‑14
Beans broad Whole 12 mm, 99.5% GB London FOB 1.29 1.19 0.0% w/w Sideways 2026‑03‑14

🌍 Supply & Demand Context

  • Brazilian supply: Conab and consultancy outlooks point to stable to slightly higher bean output in 2025/26, but with a variety shift toward exportable mung and cowpea types, which limits availability of traditional carioca beans for the domestic market.
  • Low domestic stocks: Brazilian industry representatives have warned since late 2025 that bean stocks are unusually tight, raising the risk of price volatility in 2026 if production or logistics underperform.
  • Export performance: Brazil’s bean exports in 2025 jumped by over 30% in value and more than 50% in volume, with black mung and specialty beans gaining prominence and China emerging as a key buyer.
  • UK demand: The UK remains a significant EU entry point for pulses from developing countries, including various beans and broad beans, but growth is steady rather than explosive, and post‑Brexit trade frictions keep EU re‑exports more complex.
  • Macro backdrop: Brazil’s agribusiness export earnings hit a fresh record in 2025, while a relatively strong real and firm freight rates encourage producers to seek premium export niches but can cap FOB upside in the short term.

📊 Fundamentals & Market Drivers

  • Price behavior vs. domestic wholesale: Retail and wholesale reports from early March indicate that premium carioca beans in Brazil are trading in a relatively high but stable range, with some expectation of replenishment and mild easing as new crop flows in. This aligns with the flat FOB Brasília values in this dataset.
  • Global legume balance: USDA and other global outlooks describe an overall comfortable pulses supply for 2025/26, especially when combined with adequate wheat and coarse grain supplies, which dampens extreme price spikes for most beans despite localized tightness.
  • Competing crops: Strong soybean economics and expanding corn acreage continue to compete with beans for area in Brazil, but the higher value of specialty and export‑grade beans keeps them attractive in rotation, particularly in marginal areas or double‑cropping systems.
  • Logistics and freight: Dry bulk freight from Brazil to key Asian and Mediterranean destinations firmed into early 2026, adding a modest cost layer to Brazilian FOB offers and slightly eroding their competitive edge against some alternative origins.

🌦️ Weather Outlook & Yield Risk (BR, GB)

Brazil – Brasília region (beans and other pulses)

  • Forecast (15–17 March 2026): Highs around 27–28°C with mostly cloudy skies and recurring showers and thunderstorms, under overlapping yellow/orange heavy‑rain alerts from INMET.
  • Implications:
    • Short, intense downpours may delay harvest or post‑harvest operations where beans remain in the field, raising localized quality and discoloration risk.
    • Wet conditions can slow truck loading and rural road traffic, marginally impacting near‑term FOB execution windows from interior origins like Brasília.
    • However, for earlier‑harvested lots, the main effect is logistical rather than yield‑destructive at this point in the season.

United Kingdom – London / southern England (broad and fava beans)

  • Forecast (15–17 March 2026): Cool early‑spring pattern with highs around 11–12°C, lows 3–9°C, and mostly cloudy skies with a few showers and increasing cloud cover into Monday.
  • Implications:
    • Conditions are seasonally normal and broadly favorable for early‑season field preparations but not yet critical for yield formation.
    • No acute weather shock is expected for UK bean crop prospects over the next three days; trade flows are driven more by demand and currency than by weather in this window.

📆 3‑Day Regional Price Outlook (EUR, directional)

Brazil – Brasília FOB (EUR equivalent)

Commodity 15 Mar 2026 16 Mar 2026 17 Mar 2026 Bias
Alubia beans, white ≈1.24 EUR/kg ≈1.24 EUR/kg ≈1.25 EUR/kg Slightly firm – weather/logistics risk
Kidney beans, dark red ≈1.30 EUR/kg ≈1.30 EUR/kg ≈1.31 EUR/kg Sideways to mildly higher
Kidney beans, brown eye ≈1.25 EUR/kg ≈1.25 EUR/kg ≈1.26 EUR/kg Sideways

Comment: With FOB quotes flat since at least 7 March and no fresh bearish catalyst, any short‑term move is more likely to the upside if heavy rains slow shipment programs or if domestic buyers advance purchases.

United Kingdom – London FOB (EUR equivalent)

Commodity 15 Mar 2026 16 Mar 2026 17 Mar 2026 Bias
Kidney beans, white ≈1.23 EUR/kg ≈1.23 EUR/kg ≈1.23 EUR/kg Stable
German beans, split ≈0.86 EUR/kg ≈0.86 EUR/kg ≈0.86 EUR/kg Stable / slightly soft
Fava beans, sortex small ≈1.07 EUR/kg ≈1.07 EUR/kg ≈1.07 EUR/kg Stable
Broad beans, whole 12 mm ≈1.19 EUR/kg ≈1.19 EUR/kg ≈1.19 EUR/kg Stable

Comment: With no immediate weather or demand shock and relatively subdued European pulse markets, London FOB bean prices are expected to remain flat over the next three sessions, with movements mainly driven by FX and freight adjustments.

📌 Trading Outlook – Key Takeaways

  • Brazilian sellers (BR/FOB): Use the current sideways market to lock in forward sales on specialty beans, especially where logistics are vulnerable to heavy rainfall. Consider modestly higher ask levels (EUR +0.01–0.02/kg) for prompt nearby slots if storms disrupt loading windows.
  • Brazilian buyers/exporters: For domestic coverage, avoid becoming too short: low stock signals argue for carrying a small buffer position into April despite today’s flat prices.
  • UK importers: With London FOB offers steady and freight from Brazil firm but not spiking, this is a reasonable window to secure Q2–Q3 coverage on Brazilian or Chinese beans where quality premiums are justified.
  • Spread opportunities: The small EUR premium of Brazilian Alubia and dark red kidney beans over UK white kidney and broad beans remains justified by quality and freight; no immediate arbitrage opportunity is visible on a 3‑day horizon.