Halfway Through the US Peanut Harvest - Apparent Quality Issues

Nicaragua Peanut Market – Lower Acreage and Production, Stable Export Base

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Nicaragua Peanut Market – Lower Acreage and Production, Stable Export Base

Nicaragua’s peanut acreage is forecast to shrink by 5% in MY 2025/26 due to Brazilian oversupply and falling prices.
Despite reduced output, exports of shelled peanuts are expected to stay above 70,000 MT annually, maintaining Nicaragua’s role as a stable regional supplier.


📊 Market Overview – MY 2025/26 Forecast (FCA)

Indicator 2024/25 (Est.) 2025/26 (Forecast) YoY Change Notes
Area Harvested 44,000 ha 42,000 ha -5% Farmers exit marginal lands
Production (in-shell) 196,000 MT 186,000 MT -5% Prices at $0.25/lb near cost
Exports (shelled) 151,000 MT 152,000 MT flat EU, Mexico, Central America
Domestic Use 45,000 MT 34,000 MT -24% Crushing down sharply
Crush (oil stock) 30,000 MT 20,000 MT -33% Improved grain quality
Peanut Oil Production 10,000 MT 7,000 MT -30% Almost fully exported

🌍 Key Market Drivers

  • Price Pressure: Brazilian record crop + Argentine supply drove peanut prices down 12% YoY, to $0.25/lb, barely covering costs of ~$1,600/ha.
  • Area Reduction: Farmers abandon marginal soils; focus shifts to high-yield plots in León & Chinandega (90% of production).
  • Weather: El Niño drought in 2023/24 cut yields to 3.8 MT/ha; La Niña in 2024/25 lifted yields to 4.4 MT/ha with good rains.
  • Consumption: 34,000 MT forecast; only ~5,000 MT consumed domestically as snacks, ~20,000 MT crushed for oil.
  • Exports: Remain Nicaragua’s anchor: >90% of runner-type peanuts go abroad, mainly to EU (NL, UK, Germany), Mexico, Central America.
  • Peanut Oil Trade: ~7,000 MT crude oil exported; EU takes 60%, China 30%, U.S. 10%.

🔮 Outlook – MY 2025/26

  • Production: Down to 186,000 MT, but yields remain competitive (4.4 MT/ha).
  • Exports: Stable above 150,000 MT shelled peanuts; EU share rising.
  • Domestic Use: Shrinks due to reduced crushing; higher-quality grain reduces oil-stock availability.
  • Oil Sector: Peanut oil output falls 30% to 7,000 MT; exports continue as crude oil.

💬 Commentary

Nicaragua’s peanut sector faces profitability pressure from global oversupply, but remains resilient. Farmers are adjusting by intensifying cultivation in fertile zones, avoiding marginal land.

The country is highly export-oriented, with Europe absorbing over 40% of shelled exports. The oil sector is secondary, with most oil shipped abroad rather than used domestically.

Looking ahead, Nicaragua is expected to sustain its position as a reliable, mid-scale origin in global peanut trade, though profitability is fragile if Brazil continues to flood the market.


📈 Trading Outlook & Recommendations

  • Importers (EU/Mexico): Dependable supply of runner-type peanuts, but monitor quality variability under weather stress.
  • Exporters (Nicaragua): Focus on EU markets; maintain high quality to protect price premiums.
  • Oil Traders: Expect reduced oil-stock volumes; crude oil exports to remain EU/China/U.S. focused.
  • Risk Factors: Price competition from Brazil/Argentina, credit availability for Nicaraguan farmers, climate variability (El Niño/La Niña).

Source: USDA