Rapeseed Market Steady on MATIF While Forward Curve Softens
Euronext rapeseed futures hold above €520/t while later maturities ease. EU yield risks and softer ICE canola shape a cautious, range‑bound outlook.
Prices & Curve Structure
On Euronext (MATIF), nearby rapeseed futures are clustered in a narrow band just above €525/t, with the August 2026 contract last quoted around €526.75/t and November 2026 at about €528.75/t. Further out, the curve turns gradually softer, with August 2027 and November 2027 near €490–492/t and most 2028 positions trading in the high €480s to low €490s per tonne.
On ICE Canada, canola futures closed lower on 20 May, with key 2026–2027 contracts down around 0.5–1.0% on the day, signalling mild downside momentum and easing some of the external support for European prices. In the physical market, recent offers point to French rapeseed FOB Paris around €620/t equivalent and Ukrainian 42% oil rapeseed around €610/t FCA Odesa/Kyiv, indicating firm cash premiums over futures despite the softer forward curve.
Supply, Demand & Weather
EU supply expectations remain broadly comfortable but are being nudged lower at the margin. The EU crop monitoring service (MARS) has reduced its rapeseed yield forecast to about 3.19 t/ha, around 5% below last season, citing spring dryness in central, eastern and northern Europe and local frost damage in some rapeseed areas. Despite this downgrade, yields are still close to the five‑year average and not yet indicative of a severe shortfall.
On the demand side, vegetable oil prices have been supported by firm crude oil markets and recovering energy demand, providing a floor to rapeseed oil values and keeping EU crush margins broadly positive. Imports from Ukraine remain an important balancing factor, with FCA prices there only slightly below French FOB indications, reflecting sustained international interest and persistent logistics and risk premia in the Black Sea. In Canada, analysts see downside risks for canola prices if Prairie weather normalises, which could eventually spill over into weaker global oilseed benchmarks.
Fundamentals & Market Drivers
The current futures structure suggests a market that is snug nearby but expects more comfortable availability in 2027–28. The premium of physical rapeseed over MATIF indicates that crushers and exporters are still competing for limited spot supplies, while futures traders price in a normalization of stocks over time. Recent EU and USDA outlooks broadly confirm a modest contraction in EU rapeseed production for 2026/27 despite slightly higher planted area, mainly due to weather‑linked yield losses.
Speculative interest appears moderate, with no clear evidence of a crowded long or short, leaving prices more sensitive to incremental news on weather, energy and related oilseeds (soybeans, sunflower). The recent slight softening of ICE canola and the lack of new bullish macro signals argue for a consolidation phase rather than a strong trend move in either direction.
Short-Term Outlook & Trading Ideas
Weather forecasts for the coming week point to cooler, wetter conditions over parts of central and south‑eastern Europe, which should help replenish soil moisture after April’s deficits and stabilise yield prospects for late‑developing rapeseed. Barring a new weather scare in Europe or North America, this favours a continuation of the current range‑bound pattern on MATIF.
- Producers (EU): Consider scaling in additional hedges on rallies above €530–540/t for 2026 new‑crop contracts while leaving some upside open in case of further yield downgrades.
- Crushers: Maintain coverage for nearby seed needs but avoid over‑hedging forward oil sales; strong physical premiums and firm energy markets still support crush margins in the short run.
- Buyers (importers/users): Use any dips towards €500/t on forward MATIF contracts as opportunities to extend coverage, especially if ICE canola resumes its downward drift and narrows the trans‑Atlantic premium.
3-Day Directional View (Key Exchanges)
- MATIF Rapeseed (nearby Aug 2026): Likely to trade sideways in a roughly €520–535/t band, with limited volatility absent fresh weather or macro shocks.
- MATIF Forward (2027–28): Bias slightly softer but mostly stable around €485–500/t as markets wait for clearer evidence on the 2026/27 balance sheet.
- ICE Canola: Mild downward bias following recent losses, but still closely tracking weather headlines on the Canadian Prairies.