Global rice prices are drifting moderately lower as Asian export offers soften and CBOT rough rice futures remain range-bound around 11–12 USD/cwt. Abundant exportable supply in Asia and comfortable public stocks, especially in India, are capping the upside despite broader grain market concerns.
Physical export markets in India and Vietnam show a clear but orderly downtick in FOB values over recent weeks, with most grades easing by roughly 2–4%. This aligns with indications that exporters face strong competition and high freight costs, while demand from key buyers in the Middle East and Africa remains cautious. Futures positioning on CBOT is steady, suggesting no imminent shift toward a strongly bullish or bearish trend.
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📈 Prices & Futures
CBOT rough rice futures are trading slightly higher on the nearby contract, with May 2026 last quoted around 11.13 USD/cwt, up a marginal 0.27% on the day. The forward curve remains gently upward sloping, with January 2027 near 12.33 USD/cwt and March 2027 at 12.59 USD/cwt, pointing to modest carry rather than a tightness-driven backwardation.
Liquidity is thin across the rice strip, with single‑digit daily volume on most deferred contracts and open interest concentrated in nearby months. This underlines that physical fundamentals in Asia and government stock policies, rather than futures market dynamics, continue to dominate price formation in global rice trade.
📊 Export Price Snapshot (converted to EUR)
The following table summarizes key FOB offers (21 March 2026) from India (New Delhi) and Vietnam (Hanoi). USD-denominated offers have been approximated to EUR using a working rate of 1 USD ≈ 0.92 EUR.
| Origin | Type | Price (EUR/kg, FOB) | 1-week change (EUR/kg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| India | All steam, PR11 | 0.45 | -0.02 |
| India | All steam, 1121 steam | 0.85 | -0.03 |
| India | White basmati, organic | 1.78 | -0.02 |
| Vietnam | Long white 5% | 0.44 | -0.02 |
| Vietnam | Jasmine | 0.46 | -0.02 |
Across the Indian and Vietnamese offers, most grades have eased by about 0.02–0.03 EUR/kg since early March, with both mainstream parboiled types and higher‑value fragrant and specialty rices affected. The decline is orderly rather than steep, indicating competitive pressure and ample supply rather than a demand shock.
🌍 Supply, Demand & Trade Flows
India remains the pivotal supplier to the world rice market, accounting for more than 40% of global exports and shipping over 20 million tonnes annually in recent seasons. Abundant public stocks and strong procurement have kept domestic availability comfortable, even as exports of parboiled and non‑basmati rice have expanded.
Recent trade data point to continued strong Indian export participation, supported by the removal of earlier export curbs and competitive pricing into West Africa and parts of Asia. Market commentary also highlights that, despite logistical disruptions around the Middle East, India still holds substantial exportable surplus, with some basmati cargoes temporarily delayed at ports rather than canceled outright.
Vietnam’s export prices have softened modestly in March, reflecting abundant export supply after good harvest outcomes and competition from India in key African and Asian markets. International monitoring suggests that by mid‑March, paddy prices in several origins remained firm at the farm level, but FOB quotations in India and Vietnam edged down on moderate demand and aggressive seller offers.
☁️ Weather & External Drivers
Weather conditions in major Asian producing regions have been broadly favorable in recent weeks, with no acute, market‑moving drought or flood signals emerging. This supports expectations of steady near‑term supply from India, Vietnam and Thailand, contributing to the slight easing in export prices.
Outside the rice complex, broader grain markets are watching fertilizer supply issues and geopolitical risks, including disruptions around key maritime routes. These factors are more pronounced in wheat and maize but could spill over into rice via freight rates and input costs. For now, comfortable rice stock levels in exporting countries are buffering the market from the sharper volatility seen in other cereals.
📌 Trading Outlook
- Importers: Use the current softening in Asian FOB prices to extend coverage modestly into Q2, especially for standard long‑grain and parboiled grades, but avoid over‑buying given still‑ample stocks and stable futures.
- Exporters (India & Vietnam): Focus on price competitiveness and freight optimization; with modest downward pressure on offers, margins will hinge increasingly on logistics efficiency and currency moves.
- Hedgers & Traders: With CBOT rough rice trading in a gentle contango and no clear bullish catalyst, a neutral to slightly short bias against physical length appears appropriate, while keeping options open for weather or policy‑driven shocks later in the year.
📆 3‑Day Directional Outlook (EUR)
- CBOT rough rice (May 2026, EUR‑equivalent): Sideways to slightly firmer; modest support from broader grains but capped by comfortable Asian supply.
- Indian FOB (New Delhi): Mild downward bias of up to ~0.01 EUR/kg across non‑basmati and basmati export grades as sellers remain competitive.
- Vietnamese FOB (Hanoi): Largely stable with a slight soft tone; any further weakness likely limited unless new demand shocks emerge.



