Wheat Markets Caught Between US Drought Stress and Heavy EU Stocks
Wheat prices firm as US drought hits winter wheat, while large EU stocks and weak exports cap gains. Outlook shaped by WASDE and Kansas crop tour.
Prices & Spreads
Physical and futures markets show modest but noticeable firming, particularly in the US, while EU values lag due to burdensome stocks.
- Recent futures data confirm that Chicago and Kansas contracts outperformed Matif at the start of the week, with Chicago up ~2–2.5% and Matif by just about 1%, reflecting stronger US weather risk premia.
- EU milling wheat futures on Euronext continue to face resistance from large old-crop stocks and slow export sales despite the recent bounce.
Supply & Demand Drivers
Fundamentals are currently dominated by contrasting regional dynamics: heavy EU carryover and soft exports versus tightening risks in the US hard red winter belt.
- Europe: Ample old-crop stocks, weak export demand and mostly favourable weather for the new crop are weighing on sentiment and limiting the upside on Euronext despite external support from the US and energy markets.
- United States – winter wheat: The condition of the US winter wheat crop has deteriorated further, with only 28% of area rated good to excellent, undershooting already modest trade expectations and marking the weakest rating for this time of year since 2022. Around 70% of winter wheat fields are in areas affected by drought, sharply higher than 22% a year ago, increasing the risk of yield losses.
- United States – spring wheat: Spring wheat sowing progress has reached 53%, ahead of both analyst expectations (50%) and the five-year average (51%), which supports the outlook for spring wheat availability even as winter wheat struggles.
- US exports: USDA export inspections for the week to 7 May showed shipments of 511,436 tonnes, up 1.8% week-on-week and 26% year-on-year. Cumulative 2025/26 exports now stand at 22.875 million tonnes, 13% above the same point last year, with South Korea, Mexico and Japan taking the largest volumes.
- Macro & energy: Rising crude oil prices have underpinned the broader commodity complex, indirectly supporting wheat through higher input and freight costs and by improving the relative attractiveness of grains in diversified commodity portfolios.
US Crop Conditions & Kansas Wheat Tour
US crop reports and field tours are sharpening focus on hard red winter wheat production risk.
- The latest US crop progress data highlight the scale of stress: market analysts had expected around 32% good/excellent winter wheat, but the realized 28% underscores how quickly conditions have worsened under persistent dryness.
- Roughly 70% of US winter wheat acreage is within drought-affected areas, a dramatic deterioration from about 22% last year, raising the likelihood of structurally lower hard red winter yields in key Plains states.
- In Kansas, the key US winter wheat state, more than half of the crop is already rated poor or very poor, and the Wheat Quality Council’s Hard Winter Wheat Tour (12–14 May) is expected to confirm significantly reduced yield potential compared with last season.
- Spring weather across the central and southern Plains remains challenging, with forecasts calling for ongoing warmth and only patchy relief from showers, keeping production risks firmly on the market’s radar.
Weather Outlook (Key Regions)
Weather remains the main swing factor for the next leg in prices, particularly in the US.
- US Plains: Short-term forecasts point to above-normal temperatures and limited, scattered rainfall across much of Kansas and neighbouring states, offering little immediate relief to drought-stressed winter wheat during critical reproductive stages.
- Europe: Major EU wheat areas currently enjoy largely favourable moisture and temperature conditions for the developing 2026 harvest, helping to stabilise yield prospects and reinforcing the heavy-stock narrative.
WASDE & Market Outlook
The upcoming USDA WASDE, with its first full 2026/27 balances, is a key event risk and could shift the market’s risk premium.
- The report due this evening will integrate lower US winter wheat condition scores, updated harvested area assumptions and early yield estimates, offering the first structured view of how much drought risk is already embedded in official numbers.
- Given the strong US export pace to date and the scale of Plains dryness, there is scope for the market to interpret the 2026/27 outlook as tighter than previously assumed, especially for high-protein hard wheat.
- In contrast, large EU carryout and competitive Black Sea offers (notably Ukraine FOB Odesa around 0.18 EUR/kg) continue to cap global benchmarks and may offset part of the US-led bullish impulse in the near term.
Trading & Risk Management Ideas
- End users (mills, feed compounders): Consider extending coverage modestly on nearby and early new-crop demand, especially for higher-protein US and EU origins, while retaining flexibility around the WASDE to add on any post-report dips.
- Producers in the US Plains: Use current price strength to layer in incremental hedges on remaining unsold old-crop and early 2026/27 production, but keep some unpriced volume given ongoing weather volatility and the potential for deeper yield cuts.
- EU farmers & co-ops: With large old-crop stocks and softer export demand, consider being slightly more aggressive in forward sales on rallies, particularly if local basis remains firm versus Matif.
- Speculative participants: The risk/reward favours selectively long exposure in US wheat versus short or neutral positions in European contracts, expressing the divergence between drought-stressed US supply and more comfortable EU fundamentals.
3‑Day Directional Price Indication (EUR)
- Euronext milling wheat (front months): Slightly firmer to sideways, with gains likely capped by heavy EU stocks and weak export demand despite US support.
- CBOT wheat (converted to EUR): Bias moderately higher as the market continues to price in US Plains drought and awaits confirmation from the Kansas wheat tour and WASDE.
- Black Sea/Ukraine FOB: Mostly steady in EUR terms, retaining a competitive edge versus EU origins but with limited immediate upside without a broader global rally.