Chilean Prunes Edge Higher on Firm EU Demand and Steady Supply

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Prices for Chilean dried prunes delivered into Europe are edging higher, supported by firm spot demand and relatively comfortable, but not excessive, exportable supply from Chile.

European buyers are returning to the market after winter, with Chile well-positioned thanks to competitive logistics and improved market access into the EU. Recent Chilean industry updates confirm solid 2024/25 and early-2025/26 production with good calibres, while a new Chile–EU trade framework further underpins prune export competitiveness. At the same time, no major disruptions are reported in Chilean ports, so current price strength reflects real demand rather than acute supply stress.

📈 Prices

Spot indications for Chilean conventional dried prunes (Elliot type) into Central Europe (FCA warehouse) are currently around EUR 3.15/kg, up roughly 7% from early March levels near EUR 2.95–3.00/kg. This continues a mild upward trend over recent weeks as buyers rebuild coverage.

Product Origin Destination basis Current price (EUR/kg) 1-week change 4-week change
Dried prunes, conventional Chile FCA Central Europe 3.15 ▲ ~7% ≈ flat to slightly higher

Forward discussions for late Q2/Q3 shipments are emerging with a modest carry over current spot, reflecting expectations of steady demand and limited downside as Chilean sellers are in no rush to discount.

🌍 Supply & Demand

Recent Chilean industry analysis points to robust prune availability in 2024/25, with around 86,000 tonnes of plums allocated to the prune industry after fresh exports, following a slight downward revision of initial crop expectations. Quality and calibres are reported as better than the prior season, supporting good export performance into more than 80 markets.

Global prune balance sheets from leading producer organisations show Chile maintaining a key supplier role alongside the US and France, with total Chilean supply in 2024 only slightly below the prior year but still ample for export programs. European demand is helped by health-oriented consumption trends and by Chile’s expanded tariff-free access to the EU since February 2025, which reduces landed cost versus some competitors.

🌦️ Weather & Logistics (Chile, CL)

So far in March, central Chile’s key prune regions have not reported extreme weather disruptions affecting the current dried-fruit shipping window, and orchards are moving through the post-harvest phase under broadly seasonal conditions according to local industry commentary. No acute port congestion has been signalled at Valparaíso or San Antonio in the last few days beyond normal seasonal peaks, and prior structural constraints are currently managed within existing capacities.

Given the seasonality of prune exports (heaviest in February–April) and the absence of fresh disruption headlines in recent days, logistics are considered supportive rather than a bullish driver at this stage, allowing sellers to execute contracts on schedule.

📊 Market Drivers

  • Chilean crop & quality: Good 2024/25 production with improved calibres and solid export pace underpins steady seller confidence.
  • EU market access: The interim Chile–EU trade agreement in force since February 2025 boosts preferential access, helping Chilean dried fruit remain competitive in Europe.
  • Global competition: World prune supply remains comfortable but not burdensome; Chile’s share stays significant versus the US, France, and Argentina.
  • Demand tone: Stable health-driven consumption and diversified destinations (80+ markets) support a relatively firm demand floor for Chilean prunes.

📆 Trading Outlook

  • Buyers (importers/packers): Consider covering Q2 physical needs soon while prices hover near EUR 3.15/kg, as upside risk outweighs near-term downside if demand in Europe remains firm.
  • Sellers (exporters/packers in Chile): Maintain offering discipline; only concede on price for larger-volume or longer-tenor contracts, as current fundamentals justify a mildly firmer bias.
  • Industry users (manufacturers): Evaluate partial forward coverage into Q3 to lock in current levels, especially for higher-calibre material where premiums may widen later in the year.

📉 3-Day Price Direction (Key European Hub)

  • Central Europe (FCA warehouse, Chile origin prunes): Bias: sideways to slightly firmer over the next 3 days, with tight seller offers and no new bearish supply news.