Wheat futures pause as May rally fades and new-crop pressure builds
Concise June 2026 wheat market update: MATIF & CBOT pause after May rally, U.S. Plains drought vs. solid EU/Black Sea exports, and 3‑day price outlook in EUR.
Prices & Forward Curve
MATIF milling wheat futures for Sep-26 closed at about EUR 204/t on 2 June, with Dec-26 at EUR 213/t and Mar-27 at EUR 219/t. Farther out, contracts edge up to roughly EUR 228–235/t by mid‑2028, confirming a modest contango structure and signalling that the market does not currently price a structural supply squeeze.
On CBOT, nearby July-26 wheat trades around 598 USc/bu (≈EUR 202/t), with Dec-26 near 632 USc/bu (≈EUR 213/t). ICE feed wheat in the UK is slightly lower on the day, with Nov-26 around GBP 184/t (≈EUR 216/t). Physical FOB offers remain stable: French 11.0% protein wheat from Paris holds near EUR 290/t FOB, while U.S. 11.5% CBOT‑type wheat is around EUR 210/t FOB and Ukrainian 11.0–12.5% protein wheat from Odesa hovers close to EUR 180/t FOB, underlining competitive Black Sea supplies.
Supply, Demand & Weather
Fundamentally, markets are balancing a sharply reduced U.S. winter wheat outlook against relatively comfortable export availability from the EU and Black Sea. USDA’s latest projections point to one of the smallest U.S. wheat harvests in decades due to persistent drought in the central and southern Plains, with winter wheat crop conditions stuck near multi‑year lows. Recent Crop Progress data show U.S. winter wheat rated only around the mid‑20s percent in good‑to‑excellent, well below last year and the five‑year average, underpinning HRW basis levels and limiting downside on global benchmarks.
By contrast, EU soft wheat exports are running ahead of last season, helped by active demand from North Africa and the Middle East, while Black Sea wheat remains aggressively priced and logistically available, despite ongoing regional risks. Recent USDA inspection data confirm firm U.S. wheat export flows as well, with total U.S. grain inspections, including wheat, up week‑on‑week and year‑on‑year, signalling that international buyers are still actively covering nearby needs rather than waiting for further price breaks.
Weather-wise, DTN forecasts show continued rainfall events across key U.S. Northern Plains and Canadian Prairies wheat belts over the coming week, helping spring wheat establishment but also bringing some localised flooding risk. In the Black Sea region, models indicate only scattered showers with no clear heat stress for now, while much of Western and Central Europe sees a mix of moderate temperatures and periodic rainfall—supportive for yield potential but also adding some harvest‑timing uncertainty later in June and July.
Fundamentals & Market Drivers
- Curve structure: Both MATIF and CBOT wheat show a mild contango out to 2028, reflecting adequate projected global balances and normalised storage/financing costs rather than acute tightness.
- Crop conditions: U.S. winter wheat ratings at multi‑year lows keep a risk premium in HRW and underpin global spreads, even as rains arrive too late to fully repair yield losses in Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.
- Speculative positioning: After a sizable May rally driven by weather worries and short‑covering, recent price softness suggests funds are trimming long exposure as new‑crop progress and more neutral weather headlines reduce immediate upside catalysts.
- Trade flows: EU soft wheat exports are tracking above last year, while U.S. wheat inspections and Black Sea offers confirm that export channels remain open. This tempers the bullish impact of U.S. production downgrades on world prices.
- Basis & physicals: Stable FOB indications in France, the U.S. and Ukraine, along with unchanged FCA prices in key Ukrainian inland hubs, underline that nearby demand is steady but not accelerating, consistent with the current consolidation in futures.
Short-Term Outlook & Trading Ideas
For the coming days, price action is likely to remain range‑bound as the market digests early U.S. harvest results and tracks June weather in the Northern Hemisphere. With MATIF Sep-26 around EUR 200–210/t and CBOT Jul-26 near the equivalent of EUR 200–205/t, much of the immediate drought and war risk seems already priced in, while improved weather caps rallies.
- Importers/consumers: Consider layering in coverage on price dips toward the lower end of recent ranges (≈EUR 200/t MATIF Sep-26 equivalent), especially for Q4‑2026 and early‑2027 needs, while keeping some flexibility for potential harvest‑pressure opportunities.
- Producers: With the forward curve gently upward‑sloping, incremental hedging of 2026/27 production on rallies toward EUR 215–225/t (MATIF) looks prudent, combined with options to preserve upside if weather or geopolitical risks escalate.
- Traders: The moderate contango and stable physical differentials favour carry strategies and inter‑market spreads (e.g., MATIF vs. CBOT, or EU vs. Black Sea basis) rather than outright directional bets in the very short term.
3-Day Regional Price Indication (Directional)
- MATIF (Paris) Wheat: Mildly softer to sideways over the next 2–3 sessions; Sep‑26 likely to trade broadly in a EUR 200–210/t band as markets track U.S. harvest headlines and European weather.
- CBOT (Chicago) Wheat: Slight downside bias, with July‑26 seen testing support around the equivalent of EUR 198–202/t if risk sentiment stays cautious and crop conditions stabilise.
- Black Sea FOB (Ukraine) Wheat: Largely stable, with Ukrainian 11–12.5% wheat expected to hold near EUR 175–185/t FOB Odesa, maintaining its role as a key price floor for global exporters in the near term.