Rapeseed pressured by oil sell‑off and strong soy outlook despite firm EUR prices
Concise rapeseed market analysis covering crude oil’s impact, soy fundamentals, EU & Black Sea prices in EUR, and a 3‑day trading outlook.
Prices & Spreads
Euronext (MATIF) rapeseed futures are broadly stable after recent losses, with the nearby Aug‑26 contract last trading around EUR 525/t, and Nov‑26 and Feb‑27 close to EUR 528/t. Further forward positions out to Nov‑28 trade in a slightly lower EUR 485–500/t range, reflecting expectations of more comfortable medium‑term supply.
On ICE, Canadian canola futures rebounded yesterday, with Jul‑26 settling near CAD 751/t and Nov‑26 around CAD 760/t, up roughly 1.8–2.0% on the day, tracking a short‑term bounce after heavy losses linked to crude weakness earlier in the week.
In the physical market, French rapeseed FOB Paris was last indicated around EUR 640/t (0.64 EUR/kg), up from roughly EUR 600/t in early May, while Ukrainian 42% oil rapeseed FCA Kyiv and Odesa is offered near EUR 600/t (0.60 EUR/kg), slightly below levels seen at the end of April. The modest EU/Ukraine premium structure supports continued flows from the Black Sea into EU crushers.
*Indicative EUR conversion from CAD using recent FX.
Macro Drivers & Oilseed Complex
Rapeseed is currently dominated by macro‑ and energy‑driven sentiment. At the start of the week, media reports suggested the U.S. and Iran were close to an agreement that could end hostilities and reopen the Strait of Hormuz. This triggered a pronounced sell‑off in crude oil and, in turn, in vegetable oils, pushing rapeseed prices lower on both Euronext and ICE.
Despite subsequent U.S. strikes on Iran that have revived uncertainty about a quick peace deal, oil benchmarks remain under pressure compared with early April highs. Analysts highlight that falling Middle East risk premiums, if a deal is eventually concluded, would remove a key support for energy‑linked agri markets, even though physical oil balances remain tight in the near term.
Within the broader oilseed complex, improving U.S. soybean crop prospects are adding bearish pressure. Recent rainfall in U.S. growing regions has improved conditions for soybean development, reinforcing expectations for a solid 2026/27 crop. The Chicago Board of Trade soy complex has therefore faced headwinds, weighing indirectly on rapeseed as crushers and traders reassess relative value across oilseeds.
Fundamentals & Positioning
On the demand side, the USDA recently reported a private export sale of 252,000 t of soybean meal to unknown destinations, split between 2025/26 and 2026/27. While this underpins medium‑term protein meal demand, it has not fully offset the overall softer tone in soybean trade flows.
Weekly USDA export data show U.S. soybean export commitments at 39.37 Mt for the current season, down 18% year on year and covering only 95% of the USDA forecast versus a typical 98% at this time. This lagging pace signals weaker external pull for U.S. beans, a bearish signal that spills over into rapeseed pricing via crush margin expectations and oilseed substitution.
Speculative money is also turning more cautious: CFTC data up to 19 May indicate that financial investors reduced their net long in soybean futures and options by just over 7,000 contracts to about 207,800 contracts. This trimming of length in soy is consistent with a broader rotation out of oilseeds as crude retreats and weather improves, limiting the appetite for sustained rallies in rapeseed.
Weather Snapshot
Weather in key North American soybean regions has turned more favourable, with improved rainfall alleviating earlier dryness concerns and supporting yield potential. This better outlook for the U.S. soy crop reduces the likelihood of a weather‑driven oilseed price spike in the near term, indirectly weighing on rapeseed values.
In Europe and the Black Sea, recent assessments suggest mostly adequate conditions for rapeseed, especially in Ukraine, where consultants project a robust 2026 crop. Provided current weather patterns hold, the region is likely to offer steady seed availability into the new season, reinforcing the gently backward‑tilted forward curve on Euronext.
Trading Outlook
- Producers (EU/Ukraine): Consider scaling in hedges on rallies back toward the upper EUR 530–540/t range for nearby MATIF contracts, as macro headwinds from crude and a strong U.S. soy outlook limit upside in the short term.
- Crushers: Current physical spreads (EU premium over Ukraine) and softer futures levels offer opportunities to secure forward seed coverage, especially for Q4 2026–Q1 2027, while maintaining some flexibility in case of renewed geopolitical spikes in oil.
- Consumers & Feed buyers: Maintain a patient, incremental buying strategy; consider adding coverage on dips toward EUR 500/t on MATIF, as structural tightness in biofuel and vegoil demand could still provide support later in the season.
- Speculators: Given high geopolitical volatility, favour short‑term, range‑bound strategies with close risk controls rather than directional bets, using crude oil moves and U.S. weather updates as primary triggers.
3‑Day Price Indication (Directional)
- Euronext Rapeseed (Aug‑26, Nov‑26): Mildly bearish to sideways; crude remains the key risk driver, but recent declines limit immediate downside without new macro shocks.
- ICE Canola (nearby): Sideways after recent rebound; likely to track day‑to‑day oil and soy moves within a relatively tight range.
- Physical EU & Black Sea rapeseed: Stable to slightly softer as futures weakness gradually filters into bids; logistical or geopolitical disruptions could still prompt short‑term spikes.