US corn benefits from good weather, fast planting and strong exports, while Ukraine and Brazil add ample supply. Prices stay capped despite solid demand.
Prices
Physical quotations in Europe and the Black Sea reflect a stable-to-soft tone. Recent offers indicate:
On the futures side, CBOT corn has recently traded weaker alongside other grains, as early US crop conditions and global supply prospects outweigh modest support from energy markets.
Supply & Demand
In the US, planting reached 93% of intended corn area by May 31, slightly ahead of the five-year average, and 67% of the crop is rated good to excellent in the first condition report of the season. This is marginally below last year’s 69% and analyst expectations around 70%, but overall signals a well-established crop benefiting from good early-season weather.
Ukraine is set to reinforce global export availability. The national grain traders’ association expects the 2026 corn harvest at about 32.1 million tonnes, roughly 1 million tonnes above 2025, with exports projected to rise by 5 million tonnes to 27 million tonnes, assuming stable logistics. This keeps Black Sea origins highly competitive into EU and Mediterranean destinations.
Brazil’s second (safrinha) corn harvest has started slightly earlier and faster than last year in the southern Central region, with 2.4% harvested by late May versus 1.3% a year ago. Consultancy estimates still point to a very large Brazilian crop, around 136.8 million tonnes, only fractionally below the previous forecast, maintaining strong export potential despite some regional yield concerns.
Fundamentals & Demand
US export demand for corn remains robust. USDA inspections for the week to May 28 reached 1.728 million tonnes, up 8% on the week and 5% year-on-year, with Japan, Mexico and Colombia the main buyers. Cumulative exports since September 1 stand at 61.94 million tonnes, about 27% above the same period last year, underlining that US corn is still well absorbed in global trade flows.
Industrial use is also solid, particularly in ethanol. In April, 427.68 million bushels of corn were processed into ethanol, 10% less than in March but 1% above April last year. For the marketing year to date, ethanol corn use totals 3.653 billion bushels, about 25 million bushels more than a year ago. However, the recent recovery in crude oil prices has not translated into markedly higher corn prices, suggesting margin improvements are being absorbed in the energy complex rather than passed back to feedstock.
Weather & Short-Term Outlook
US weather in late May and early June has generally favoured rapid planting and good early development, keeping soil moisture adequate in most core states and limiting immediate weather risk premiums. In Brazil, the safrinha harvest is advancing under mixed conditions: some dry areas report localized yield losses, but overall production remains large.
In Ukraine, current estimates assume normal weather; any disruption to logistics or a turn to adverse conditions would be needed to materially tighten the export balance. For now, the global corn complex enters summer with comfortable supply expectations, barring an unexpected US weather shock in July–August.
Trading Outlook
- Producers (US/EU): Consider scaling in hedges on rallies, as strong early crop conditions in the US and larger Ukrainian and Brazilian supplies limit upside. Retain some weather-related upside exposure through options into pollination.
- Importers: Near-term buying opportunities remain attractive, especially for Black Sea and Brazilian origins. Stagger purchases over the next 4–8 weeks to manage US weather risks while benefiting from currently competitive offers.
- Speculative traders: Market structure favours a modestly bearish-to-rangebound stance, with opportunities to sell rallies unless US weather or geopolitical logistics in the Black Sea deteriorate sharply.
3-Day Price Indication
- Paris FOB (FR corn): Slightly soft to sideways around 0.26 EUR/kg, tracking CBOT and abundant global supply.
- Black Sea (UA corn, FOB/FCA): Stable to marginally weaker; competitive offers near 0.18–0.26 EUR/kg likely persist barring logistics issues.
- CBOT futures (reference, converted to EUR): Bias mildly lower to sideways over the next three sessions as strong US crop conditions cap weather premiums.