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Korea’s Onion Export Push Adds Premium Angle to a Global Glut

Korea’s Onion Export Push Adds Premium Angle to a Global Glut

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CMB News Editorial
Editorial Desk

South Korea’s new onion export plan targets Taiwan and Southeast Asia amid domestic and global oversupply, pressuring prices but opening premium niches.

South Korea’s new export push for premium onions is a defensive move against domestic oversupply, but it adds only a modest tightening impulse to an already saturated regional and global onion market. Near term, prices remain under pressure in Asia and beyond despite selective premium niches. Global onion fundamentals are clearly bearish, with heavy 2025/26 crops from multiple origins and visible price weakness in Asia and Europe. Korea’s strategy to ship more than 2,000 tons of top-grade onions to Taiwan and Southeast Asia, coupled with domestic stockpiling, aims to stabilize farm-gate prices at home while testing higher-value export channels. For traders and buyers, the key questions over the next 1–3 months are how quickly Korean volumes move, how freight and logistics behave, and whether summer weather reshapes storage risks.

Prices & Current Market Tone

Domestic Korean onion prices have softened as rising harvest volumes swell inventories, prompting government stockpiling and aggressive retail discounts of up to 40% to clear product. At the same time, international indicators confirm broader weakness: wholesale onions in India’s Lasalgaon hub are roughly 45% below year-ago levels, highlighting a regional glut, while European wholesale prices at Rungis sit around EUR 0.90–4.06/kg depending on type and quality.

Processed and traded products show mild but noticeable softening. Recent offers converted to EUR indicate Egyptian fresh onions around EUR 0.82/kg FOB, Indian white onion powder near EUR 1.36/kg and organic onion flakes near EUR 4.55/kg FOB, while Polish fried onions are around EUR 2.18/kg FCA. Overall, pricing across the chain suggests buyers retain strong negotiating power, with only limited support from premium positioning strategies.

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Market Data Table
Schwarzer Pfeffer6.850 €/t+2,3 %
Koriander1.240 €/t−0,8 %
Kreuzkümmel2.100 €/t+1,5 %
Zimt (Cassia)8.900 €/t+0,4 %
Kurkuma3.200 €/t−1,2 %
Kardamom grün18.500 €/t+3,1 %
Ingwer (getr.)1.850 €/t+0,9 %
Chili (getr.)2.750 €/t−0,5 %
Schwarzer Pfeffer6.850 €/t+2,3 %
Koriander1.240 €/t−0,8 %
Kreuzkümmel2.100 €/t+1,5 %
Zimt (Cassia)8.900 €/t+0,4 %
Kurkuma3.200 €/t−1,2 %
Kardamom grün18.500 €/t+3,1 %
Ingwer (getr.)1.850 €/t+0,9 %
Chili (getr.)2.750 €/t−0,5 %
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*Indicative EUR conversion from recent USD-linked FOB values and offers.

Supply & Demand: Korea’s Premium Strategy in a Glutted World

In South Korea, onion acreage is slightly down at 17,609 hectares (–0.4% year-on-year), but yields for May are projected 4.9–8.8% above the long-run average. This productivity surge, not area expansion, is the core driver of surplus, creating political pressure to defend grower incomes and avoid a price collapse.

Globally, the Korean surplus lands in a market already heavy with onions. Large 2025 and 2026 crops from Mexico, Peru, and Canada have weighed on North American demand, while new-season supply from India and Pakistan is restraining Chinese export opportunities across Southeast Asia. India’s own glut is pushing policymakers there to discuss export incentives, underscoring how multiple origins are simultaneously searching for outlets.

Policy Response & Trade Flows

On May 20, 2026, Korea’s Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs formalized an export expansion plan targeting more than 2,000 tons of premium onions, mainly into Taiwan and Southeast Asia. Authorities will subsidize sorting costs to ensure only top-grade bulbs enter export channels, explicitly shifting from past practices of dumping lower-quality surplus at distressed prices.

The export pillar is integrated into a broader domestic supply-management strategy. The ministry has already isolated 368 hectares of early-variety onions from the domestic market and earlier purchased 25,000 tons for stockpiling to underpin farm-gate returns. National cooperative Nonghyup is mobilized to aggregate premium stocks, while domestic retailers run steep discounts to pull demand forward and temper storage burdens.

Trade flows are therefore bifurcating: premium Korean onions are steered toward higher-value buyers in Taiwan, Vietnam, and Malaysia, while mid- and lower-grade product is absorbed through public stockpiles and price promotions. The success of this rebalancing will depend heavily on logistics performance and freight rates over the coming 30–90 days.

Weather & Short-Term Risks

Near-term weather across key Asian onion regions is seasonally warm to hot, with localized rainfall variability. In Korea, typical late-spring to early-summer conditions over the next 10 days are expected to be mixed but not extreme, implying limited immediate upside risk to yields from weather-related losses. In India and Pakistan, early heat signals and pre-monsoon showers could affect storage quality more than field yields at this point in the season.

The main weather-linked risk for Korean onions over the next 2–3 months is storage quality rather than production volume. Prolonged warmth and humidity could raise losses in on-farm and commercial storage, subtly tightening usable supply and supporting prices into late summer. For now, however, fundamentals remain comfortably supplied and any weather premium in prices is limited.

Market Outlook & Trading Guidance

Over the next 3 months, the onion market is likely to remain broadly oversupplied globally, with Korea’s export plan offering only localized tightening in specific premium segments. Medium term (6–12 months), continued surplus risk could force further Korean stockpiling or additional domestic support measures if export channels fail to scale beyond this season’s 2,000-ton target. Competitive pressure from entrenched exporters in India, China, and Egypt will cap upside, especially in price-sensitive Southeast Asian markets.

For Korean stakeholders, the main opportunity lies in building a reputation for consistent, premium-grade onions rather than in expecting immediate price relief. For international buyers, current conditions favor opportunistic purchasing and contract negotiations that lock in attractive values while maintaining flexibility in origin choice.

Trading Outlook (Next 1–3 Months)

  • Buyers in Asia & Europe: Use the current glut to negotiate shorter-duration contracts at fixed EUR prices, maintaining optionality between Korean, Indian, and Egyptian origins.
  • Korean exporters: Prioritize reliability and quality in first-wave shipments to Taiwan and Southeast Asia; securing repeat contracts will matter more than maximizing initial volumes.
  • Importers of processed onion products: With powder and flakes broadly stable to slightly softer, consider layering forward coverage in EUR where logistics and storage allow.
  • Producers: Monitor domestic policy closely; additional stockpiling or support schemes are likely if export execution lags and prices weaken further.

3-Day Directional Outlook (Key Hubs, in EUR)

  • Korea (domestic fresh market): Sideways to slightly weaker as harvest flows continue and export volumes ramp slowly.
  • Southeast Asia (imported fresh onions): Slight downside bias as additional Korean and Indian supply competes, with limited demand growth near term.
  • Europe (Rungis benchmark): Largely stable, with minor softness possible amid improving seasonal availability and modest demand recovery.
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