Sunflower Market Steady but Firmer: South Africa, Black Sea and China in Focus
Concise sunflower market update: stable SAFEX futures, firmer Black Sea and Chinese sunflower prices, key drivers, weather risks and short‑term outlook.
Prices & Futures Structure
SAFEX sunflower futures (ZAR/t) on 11 May 2026 show a very flat but slightly rising curve. The May‑26 contract settled unchanged at 8,766 ZAR/t, while Jul‑26 edged up to 8,946 ZAR/t and Sep‑26 to 9,142 ZAR/t. Further out, Dec‑26 closed at 9,303 ZAR/t, with Mar‑27 at 9,195 ZAR/t and May‑27 at 9,030 ZAR/t, indicating only modest carry along the strip and no strong directional conviction.
In physical markets (converted to approximate EUR at 1 EUR ≈ 1.09 USD and 1 USD ≈ 0.92 EUR from quoted USD‑equivalent offers), Ukrainian black sunflower seeds FOB Odesa are indicated around EUR 0.54–0.55/kg, slightly above late‑April levels. Moldova and Bulgaria show FCA seed values near EUR 0.41–0.47/kg, while Chinese striped and black seeds stand much higher at roughly EUR 1.31/kg. Hulled bakery kernels in the EU (BG/DE) trade near EUR 0.91–1.01/kg, and Chinese hulled confection kernels around EUR 1.10–1.18/kg, confirming a firm premium for high‑spec and confection grades.
Supply & Demand Balance
South African futures stability suggests that local supply is currently seen as adequate, with the nearby contract flat and only small gains on deferred positions. The modest carry from May‑26 to Dec‑26 and into 2027 points to comfortable stock expectations but not enough surplus to trigger aggressive selling. Limited daily volumes on the longer‑dated contracts also underline the absence of strong hedging pressure at this stage.
In Europe and the Black Sea, slightly higher seed and kernel offers indicate firm underlying demand from crushers and food processors. Ukrainian FCA and FOB prices holding or ticking up signal ongoing export interest despite geopolitical and logistical uncertainties. Chinese prices for stripped and confection seeds remain well above Black Sea levels, reflecting strong domestic and snack‑industry demand, as well as quality differentials that keep a structural premium in place.
Fundamentals & Drivers
SAFEX curve signals mild bullish bias. The incremental step‑up from May‑26 (8,766 ZAR/t) to Dec‑26 (9,303 ZAR/t) and Dec‑27 (9,290 ZAR/t) implies expectations of slightly firmer replacement costs and some risk premium for potential yield or weather setbacks. Yet, the changes on 11 May were minimal (e.g., Jul‑26 +1 ZAR/t, Sep‑26 +17 ZAR/t, Dec‑26 +20 ZAR/t), underscoring that the market is not pricing a sharp tightening.
Physical price dispersion by origin and product. Black sea bulk seeds for crushing remain the value segment, particularly Ukrainian FOB around EUR 0.54–0.55/kg and Bulgarian FCA Sofia around EUR 0.41/kg. EU bakery kernels near EUR 0.91–1.01/kg and Chinese confection kernels above EUR 1.10/kg demonstrate the widening margin between commodity crushing material and premium food‑grade kernels. This spread supports crush margins but could also cap upside in basic seed values if demand for high‑value kernels stabilises rather than accelerates.
Logistics and demand. The continuation of offers ex‑Odesa and Dnipro at slightly firmer levels suggests that export channels, while still risk‑prone, are functioning well enough to support steady flows. In Europe, incremental price increases out of Bulgaria and Moldova hint at resilient bakery and snack demand, with buyers willing to pay up for quality but still price‑sensitive versus Chinese alternatives.
Weather & Crop Outlook
For South Africa, current SAFEX pricing indicates that, for now, the market is not overly concerned about acute weather stress on the 2026 crop, but the gentle contango into 2027 embeds a risk premium for potential yield variability. In the Black Sea region, early‑season weather for the 2026/27 sunflower crop will be crucial for confirming the present price floor: any sustained dryness in key Ukrainian or Bulgarian growing areas could quickly tighten forward balances and lend further support to SAFEX and EU prices.
Conversely, if planting progresses smoothly and weather remains broadly favourable, the current mild uptrend in physical offers could flatten, especially for mid‑range bakery kernels. Market participants should watch near‑term temperature and rainfall forecasts for Ukraine, Bulgaria and southern Russia closely, as these will guide whether the present firmness solidifies into a stronger rally or eases back into a sideways range.
Trading Outlook & 3‑Day View
Trading recommendations
- South African crushers & feeders: Use the current flat SAFEX curve to secure a portion of 2026 needs on minor dips; the limited downside implied by nearby pricing and modest carry makes gradual scale‑in hedging attractive.
- EU buyers of bakery kernels: With FCA Bulgaria and Germany around EUR 0.91–1.01/kg and trending firmer, consider locking in part of Q3–Q4 coverage now while monitoring Black Sea weather for confirmation of further upside risk.
- Exporters & traders in the Black Sea: Maintain offer discipline on Ukrainian seeds and kernels; the combination of functioning logistics and firm external premiums (especially versus China) supports holding margins unless weather turns decisively bearish.
Short‑term price indication (next 3 days)
- SAFEX sunflower futures: Likely to trade sideways within a narrow band around current settlements, with intraday volatility tracking regional oilseed sentiment.
- Black Sea seeds (FOB/FCA, in EUR): Mildly upward bias or steady, as buyers seek coverage but no clear catalyst for a sharp move.
- EU bakery kernels (FCA BG/DE): Stable to slightly firmer, supported by food‑grade demand and limited immediate selling pressure.