Black Sea sunflower seeds steady as Chinese kernels firm on strong demand

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Sunflower seed prices across the Black Sea region are broadly stable to slightly softer, while Chinese kernel quotations remain firm on strong snack and export demand. The nearby balance is comfortable, but record South American and Black Sea crops and high global oilseed supplies cap upside.

Physical sunflower markets in Bulgaria, Ukraine, Moldova and China are trading in a relatively narrow range, with only modest week‑on‑week moves. Black Sea seeds remain discounted versus Chinese offers, reflecting weaker crush margins and abundant seed availability. At the same time, elevated global vegetable oil stocks and expanding Argentine sunflower exports are intensifying competition into key EU destinations, especially Bulgaria. Processors are well covered for the short term, and the market is increasingly focused on new‑crop planting progress and early weather signals across Eastern Europe and northern China.

📈 Prices & Differentials

All price indications below are converted approximatively into EUR/mt for comparison, using current FX levels.

Origin / Product Spec & Term Latest level (EUR/mt) WoW move Comment
BG sunflower seeds (black) 98% FCA Sofia ≈440 Stable Flat vs late March; in line with local oilseed sunflower range of €510–560/mt FOB after logistics/margin.
BG striped seeds 98% FOB Sofia ≈650 Stable Snack segment; trades with a quality premium over crush seeds.
UA sunflower seeds 98% FCA Kyiv/Odesa ≈660 +1–2% Small uptick as farmers resist further discounts; export duty remains in place.
UA sunflower seeds 98% FOB Odesa ≈580 Flat Black Sea offers soft, capped by sluggish crush margins.
MD sunflower seeds 98% FCA (re‑export via DE) ≈610 Stable Prices track Ukrainian levels with minor freight/quality adjustments.
CN sunflower seeds Black with stripe, FOB Beijing ≈1,420 −1–2% Snack seed values eased slightly but remain far above Black Sea offers.
CN kernels (bakery/confection) Hulled, FOB Beijing ≈1,160–1,250 +1–2% Firm on strong domestic and export snack demand.

🌍 Supply, Demand & Trade Flows

Black Sea supply remains ample. Ukraine continues to channel sunflower seed and oil through Danube ports and overland EU routes despite ongoing logistical frictions, keeping export availability on the market. Bulgaria and Moldova are structurally long seeds, with Bulgaria still a leading EU producer and key transit hub for Ukrainian and, increasingly, Argentine origins.

On the demand side, Chinese snack and kernel processors are running at high capacity to serve strong domestic and Middle East/Europe demand for packaged sunflower snacks. This underpins a firm premium for FOB Beijing kernels over Black Sea offers. At the same time, global vegetable oil demand is robust but no longer accelerating, and record‑high or near‑record sunflower oil ending stocks projected for 2025/26–2026/27 are tempering upside for seed values.

Competition into the EU, particularly Bulgaria, is intensifying. Argentina is harvesting its largest sunflower crop in three decades and has already shipped around 620,000 tonnes of seed in 2026, with almost half going to Bulgaria and significant volumes to Turkey and Romania. This arbitrage flow effectively caps local Bulgarian and regional Black Sea prices and limits the ability of producers in BG, UA and MD to push for meaningful near‑term increases.

📊 Fundamentals & Weather

Bulgaria (BG): Domestic stocks remain comfortable, and crushers are well covered into late spring. Import flows from Ukraine and Argentina are supplementing local supply. Weather over the next 3–5 days is seasonally mild with scattered showers across much of the country, supportive for early fieldwork and soil moisture ahead of main sunflower planting. (Short‑term forecast inferred from regional meteorological outlooks for Southeast Europe.)

Ukraine (UA): Ukraine continues to dominate global sunflower oil exports, supplying roughly 60% of world trade. Short‑term weather over central and southern Ukraine is mixed: near‑normal temperatures with some precipitation, good for soil recharge but occasionally slowing field operations. Planting intentions remain high given competitive returns versus alternative crops, though margins are squeezed by export duties and freight costs.

Moldova (MD): Moldova’s sunflower sector is tightly linked to Ukrainian and Romanian price structures. With no major weather disruptions reported in the past few days, attention is on cross‑border logistics and competition from Argentine and Ukrainian seed into EU crushers.

China (CN): Northern Chinese sunflower regions such as Inner Mongolia are nearing the preparatory stage for spring sowing. Recent reports highlight continued investment in processing capacity and logistics to support rising exports of snack seeds and kernels. No acute short‑term weather threats are flagging for the next few days, leaving demand—not supply—the primary driver of current Chinese price firmness.

📆 Short‑Term Outlook (3 days)

  • BG (Sofia): Sideways. Adequate seed availability and incoming Argentine/Black Sea flows should keep FCA/FOB values broadly unchanged over the next 3 days.
  • UA (Odesa, Kyiv): Slightly firmer bias but within a narrow band. Farmer selling is slow at current levels, but export demand is not strong enough to trigger a sharp rally; expect mostly stable quotes.
  • MD (via DE logistics): Stable. Moldova will continue to price off Ukrainian FOB and EU crusher demand, with little room for independent movement in the immediate term.
  • CN (Beijing): Kernels: mildly firmer; seeds: steady to slightly softer. Snack demand and export orders support kernel prices, while global seed oversupply caps further increases in striped seed values.

💡 Trading Outlook & Strategy

  • BG/UA/MD producers: Use current flat prices to make incremental sales on old crop, especially where storage or finance costs are high. Avoid over‑committing new‑crop volumes until clearer signals emerge on weather and Argentine export pace.
  • EU crushers & buyers: Maintain a balanced coverage strategy. Lock in part of Q2–Q3 needs on dips, leveraging ample Black Sea and Argentine supply, but keep some open volume in case freight or geopolitical disruptions tighten nearby availability.
  • CN processors/exporters: Consider scaling in forward kernel sales at current firm levels while preserving upside exposure. Global seed oversupply and potential softness in vegetable oil prices later in the year could eventually pressure kernel premiums.
  • Merchandisers: Watch Argentine–Black Sea–EU spreads closely. The strong flow from Argentina into Bulgaria and the wider EU is a key arb driver and will influence basis levels in all Black Sea origins in the short run.

Across the next three trading days, sunflower seed and kernel markets in BG, UA, MD and CN are expected to remain largely range‑bound, with modest firmness in Chinese kernels and slight upside risk in Ukrainian FCA prices, but no clear catalyst yet for a broad price breakout.