Oats ease from recent gains as traders await USDA data and watch weather risks
Concise oat market update: CBOT futures soften after gains, Ukrainian feed oats flat, USDA stocks/acreage data and US Plains weather risks in focus.
Prices & Term Structure
On the Chicago Board of Trade, nearby oat futures are slightly lower in early trading on 31 March 2026. The May 2026 contract last traded around 348 US cents/bu, down about 0.85% (−3.0 cents) from the prior session. July 2026 is at 351.25 cents/bu (−3.0 cents), while September 2026 stands at 357.00 cents/bu (−2.25 cents). The deferred December 2026 contract bucked the weaker tone, rising 2.0 cents to 359.75 cents/bu, indicating a mildly firm deferred structure despite the softer nearby.
Further out on the curve, lightly traded contracts into 2027–2028 show settlements clustered in the mid‑350s to high‑360s cents/bu, with very low open interest. This points to a modest backwardation from early 2027 back toward the current front months, consistent with a market that is neither deeply concerned about scarcity nor in clear surplus, but is instead waiting for new fundamental signals.
In the physical market, indicative Black Sea feed oats (UA origin, FCA Odesa, 98% purity, non-organic) are quoted around EUR 0.24/kg as of 27 March 2026, unchanged from a week earlier and slightly above early‑March levels near EUR 0.23–0.24/kg. This stability suggests balanced local supply-demand for feed-quality oats, with export competitiveness supported by the region’s role in regional feed grain flows.
Supply, Demand & Cross-Market Signals
Fundamentally, the oat market is being steered more by broader cereal dynamics and upcoming data than by explicit oat-specific headlines. In the United States, traders are focused on the USDA’s quarterly stocks report and new acreage projections due on Tuesday. For the wider grain complex, analysts anticipate sizable year-on-year declines in stocks and modest shifts in planted area, factors that can indirectly influence oat acreage and price relationships via competition for land with wheat, barley, and other spring crops.
Internationally, wheat market developments provide important context. Russian export taxes on wheat are rising sharply, increasing the cost of Black Sea wheat exports in early April and potentially supporting alternative cereals in import markets. At the same time, crop condition reports from Russia, France, and the United Kingdom indicate winter cereals are generally in good to excellent condition, with French soft wheat ratings notably above last year’s level and UK wheat fields largely rated good or excellent. These favorable conditions temper fears of a broad cereal shortage, which in turn caps upside for oats in the absence of a clear oat‑specific shock.
On the demand side, US wheat export commitments are running ahead of last year and close to the USDA’s full‑season target, illustrating solid external demand for grains generally. Commitment of Traders data show that speculative short positions in Chicago wheat have been sharply reduced to the smallest net short since mid‑2022, while Kansas wheat holdings remain net long but slightly trimmed. Although these data refer to wheat, they signal a broader shift in speculative sentiment across cereals from aggressively bearish towards more neutral, which can spill over into oat futures when fresh data or weather events emerge.
Fundamentals & Macro Drivers
Structurally, oats remain a relatively small global market, and price direction is often leveraged to movements in larger grains and oilseeds. The recent surge in crude oil prices above USD 100/barrel in response to ongoing conflict in the Persian Gulf has raised input costs and transportation expenses across agriculture, modestly underpinning grain prices, including oats, through a higher energy cost base and biofuel-linked demand in competing crops.
At the same time, the interest-rate outlook in major economies remains uncertain, with rising inflation concerns and shifting expectations for monetary easing. This macro backdrop sustains general commodity investment interest but also encourages tactical profit-taking after sharp rallies. In Europe, this has already translated into front‑month grain contracts at Euronext giving back part of their prior gains, as traders lock in profits and reduce risk ahead of key US data releases and amid geopolitical uncertainty.
For oats specifically, the current CBOT price structure—slightly softer nearby with firmer deferred contracts—and flat physical prices in the Black Sea region suggest that current supplies are adequate but not burdensome. Market participants are monitoring whether US farmers will adjust spring oat acreage in response to changing relative margins versus corn, soybeans, and spring wheat, particularly given elevated fertilizer prices and war-related volatility in input markets.
Weather Outlook for Key Growing Regions
Weather risks are becoming more prominent as Northern Hemisphere spring progresses. In the southern US Plains, persistent drought conditions and high temperatures have already raised concerns about yield losses in hard red winter wheat. While oats are more concentrated farther north, these conditions underscore the broader vulnerability of spring cereals to early‑season moisture deficits and heat episodes.
Recent extreme weather across parts of North America—including late‑winter blizzards and episodes of severe storms—has highlighted the potential for localized disruptions to fieldwork and early sowing. Looking into early April, forecasts for parts of the Great Plains and some western areas point to continued episodes of elevated fire danger and above-normal temperatures, while some rainfall is expected mid‑week in southern Plains regions. For oats, timely moisture in key growing zones in Canada and the northern US Plains during April will be critical; any sustained dryness or planting delays could quickly tighten the balance sheet and support prices.
Short-Term Outlook & Trading Ideas
- Price tone: Near-term bias is slightly soft after recent gains, with May CBOT oats easing and Euronext front‑month grains giving back prior advances. However, downside appears limited ahead of the USDA stocks and acreage reports and amid elevated macro and geopolitical risk.
- Volatility risk: The upcoming US data release is a key event risk. A surprise in total grain acreage or stocks could trigger cross‑complex moves that pull oats higher or lower, despite the market’s relatively thin liquidity.
- Physical market: Stable Ukrainian feed‑oat prices in EUR indicate balanced local fundamentals. Exporters in the Black Sea region remain competitive, but logistics and geopolitical risks require careful monitoring.
Trading Outlook
- Producers (EU & Black Sea): Consider layering in additional hedges or forward sales on price rallies into key USDA data, particularly for Q2–Q3 deliveries, while keeping some exposure in case weather issues emerge in northern spring oat areas.
- Consumers (feed & milling): Use current flat physical prices and the modest futures pullback to extend coverage modestly into late Q2, but avoid over‑coverage ahead of USDA and early‑season weather, which could still generate buying opportunities on any data‑driven dips.
- Speculators: Given reduced speculative shorts in wheat and thin oat liquidity, favor small, tactical long positions on breaks, with tight risk management around the USDA report date and close attention to evolving weather maps.