Rice Market Holds Firm as CBOT Softens and Asian Weather Risks Build
Concise late-May 2026 rice market analysis: CBOT futures soften, Asian FOB prices hold firm amid monsoon, El Niño and export policy risks.
Prices & Futures Structure
CBOT rough rice futures show a modest backwardation into nearby months with low liquidity. July 2026 last traded around USD 12.88/cwt, down roughly 0.06 USD on the day, while January 2027 is near USD 13.95/cwt and March 2027 slightly above USD 14.10/cwt, indicating mild bullish expectations further out on the curve.
Converting the nearby July 2026 CBOT contract to EUR (assuming ~0.92 EUR/USD and 1 cwt ≈ 45.36 kg) implies an approximate futures-equivalent of around 0.26–0.27 EUR/kg, still below many FOB offers for premium Asian origins. This gap highlights quality differences and strong regional demand for fragrant and specialty rice compared with exchange-traded rough rice.
Export Price Snapshot (FOB, Indicative)
Indian and Vietnamese FOB offers (all converted to EUR/kg) have been remarkably stable over the past three weeks, suggesting a market that is firm but not overheating. Indian basmati and organic lines continue to command the highest premiums, while bulk long-grain 5% types from Vietnam and PR11 from India trade at the lower end of the spectrum.
Supply, Demand & Policy Drivers
On the fundamentals side, the latest international outlook points to slightly tighter global rice balances for 2025/26, with lower projected production and reduced ending stocks in several exporters. A recent May 2026 global grains update and the U.S. May rice outlook highlight lower U.S. rice production and somewhat constrained export availability, keeping the global importers more reliant on Asia.
In India, rice exports in the first four months of 2026 have slipped marginally year-on-year, mainly due to disruptions in premium basmati shipments to Gulf markets linked to regional tensions. This has only partially been offset by non-basmati sales, as African buyers remain price sensitive and well supplied in the near term. Asian reference prices, especially for Thai 5% white rice, have recently hit multi‑month highs on tight supplies and concerns about El Niño’s impact on the next crop, pushing up the entire regional price structure even as quoted FOB levels in India and Vietnam show little week‑to‑week movement.
Weather & Crop Outlook
Weather is emerging as the key medium‑term risk factor. The latest guidance indicates a high probability (above 80%) that El Niño conditions will develop into mid‑2026 and persist through the Northern Hemisphere winter, raising the risk of weaker monsoons and heat stress across parts of South and Southeast Asia. The India Meteorological Department has already downgraded its 2026 monsoon forecast to around 90% of the long‑period average and confirmed a delayed onset over Kerala, deepening concerns for kharif rice yields.
In the Philippines, authorities warn that a strong El Niño could cut domestic rice production by roughly 3.5% of the annual target, implying higher import needs later in the season. Combined with potential policy reactions (for example, import throttling or tariff changes), these weather‑linked risks are likely to keep a weather premium embedded in Asian export prices despite the current apparent stability in day‑to‑day offers.
Market Sentiment & Speculative Positioning
CBOT trading volumes across the current rice strip are very thin, with only single‑digit lots changing hands in several deferred months, suggesting that speculative interest remains limited. The mild backwardation and small daily price moves point to a market that is cautious but not yet in a panic phase, even as global narrative shifts toward El Niño risk and slightly tighter fundamental balances.
This disconnect between quiet futures and firm physical benchmarks indicates that commercial hedging may lag physical procurement. Importers appear to be taking advantage of the current plateau in FOB offers to secure nearby coverage, while leaving more distant positions open in case of any policy easing or unexpectedly benign weather patterns.
Trading Outlook & Strategy
- Importers (Africa, Middle East, Asia): Use current sideways EUR‑denominated FOB levels for Indian and Vietnamese origins to extend coverage into Q3, especially for standard long‑grain and 5% broken, given rising monsoon and El Niño risks.
- Exporters (India, Vietnam): Maintain disciplined offer levels; tight global balances and regional weather uncertainty justify holding prices, especially for premium basmati and fragrant varieties. Consider forward selling a limited share of new‑crop volumes once monsoon performance becomes clearer.
- Hedgers & Traders: The modest backwardation on CBOT with very low open interest argues for cautious hedging. Long futures or call spreads in deferred contracts can provide upside protection against a potential weather‑driven rally while limiting margin exposure.
3‑Day Price Indication (Directional, EUR)
- CBOT rough rice (equivalent EUR/kg): Slight downside to sideways as long as weather news remains incremental rather than shocking.
- India FOB (New Delhi – PR11, 1121 steam, 1509 steam): Stable in EUR terms; small intra‑day moves possible but no clear break from the current 0.36–0.73 EUR/kg band expected in the next three days.
- Vietnam FOB (long white 5%, Jasmine, Japonica): Sideways to mildly firmer, with any fresh El Niño news or regional policy chatter likely to support offers rather than pressure them.