Soybeans under pressure: profit-taking, politics and record Brazil crop

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After briefly touching their highest levels in almost two years at the Chicago Board of Trade (CBoT), soybean futures have swung sharply lower as the market digests profit-taking, political uncertainty in USโ€“China relations, and the prospect of another record Brazilian harvest. The recent rally was fuelled by strong speculative buying across the soybean complex and firm vegetable oil and crude oil prices. However, comments from US President Trump hinting that his endโ€‘March summit with Chinaโ€™s President Xi could be postponed โ€“ and conditioning further diplomatic progress on Chinaโ€™s support in reopening the Strait of Hormuz โ€“ have rattled traders. Soybean market participants had hoped this meeting would unlock fresh Chinese buying of US beans, but renewed uncertainty is prompting a reassessment of demand risk.

At the same time, Brazilโ€™s crop agency Conab has confirmed expectations for an allโ€‘time high 2025/26 soybean crop of about 177.8 million tonnes, reinforcing a picture of ample global supply and heavy ending stocks. Against this backdrop, CFTC data reveal that investment funds remain heavily net long in soybeans and soy oil, leaving the market vulnerable to further bouts of long liquidation if macro or geopolitical headlines disappoint. In Europe, rapeseed and vegetable oils had recently benefited from the same bullish narrative, reaching multiโ€‘month highs before also succumbing to profitโ€‘taking. Overall, the soybean market is transitioning from a tightnessโ€‘driven rally to a more balanced but volatile environment where politics, weather in key South American regions, and fund positioning could quickly shift sentiment.

๐Ÿ“ˆ Prices & Market Structure

CBOT soy complex and Dalian futures

The Raw Text shows that after Thursdayโ€™s near twoโ€‘year high, CBoT soybeans fell on Friday and extended losses on Monday, with frontโ€‘month contracts down around 1.9% on the day. Soybean oil and meal futures are also under pressure, although still supported by the broader strength in vegetable and crude oil markets. Chinese Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) No.1 soybean futures, in contrast, posted gains last week, reflecting resilient domestic demand and ongoing import needs.

Contract / Market Last price (converted) Weekly change Sentiment
CBOT Soybeans May 2026 โ‰ˆ โ‚ฌ400/t (from 1,201.75 USc/bu) Lower (profit-taking after 2โ€‘year high) Cautious / corrective
CBOT Soybean Meal May 2026 โ‰ˆ โ‚ฌ325/t (from 316.60 USD/short ton) โˆ’1.9% d/d; softer on crush margins Neutral to slightly bearish
CBOT Soybean Oil May 2026 โ‰ˆ โ‚ฌ1,360/t (67.05 USc/lb) โˆ’0.6% d/d; still elevated vs. Feb Supported by energy/vegโ€‘oil complex
DCE Soybeans No.1 May 2026 โ‰ˆ โ‚ฌ595/t (4,932 CNY/t) +1.5% w/w Firm on domestic demand

Note: All prices approximated in EUR using indicative FX rates; focus is on relative moves, not exact levels.

Physical FOB offers (converted to EUR)

Current Product Prices in EUR confirm a relatively stable physical market with regional differentials reflecting logistics, quality and risk premia. US No. 2 FOB values have edged higher, while Ukrainian and Indian origins remain competitively priced.

Origin Type Location / Terms Latest price (EUR/kg) Prev. price (EUR/kg) Weekly change Comment
Ukraine Soybeans Odesa, FOB โ‚ฌ0.34 โ‚ฌ0.34 Unchanged w/w Highly competitive Black Sea origin
India Soybeans, sortex clean New Delhi, FOB โ‚ฌ0.97 โ‚ฌ0.95 +2.1% w/w Firm domestic demand, quality premium
United States Soybeans No. 2 Washington D.C., FOB โ‚ฌ0.57 โ‚ฌ0.55 +3.6% w/w Reflects prior CBOT rally, export basis
China Soybeans, yellow Beijing, FOB โ‚ฌ0.68 โ‚ฌ0.66 +3.0% w/w Strong crush/use, higher import costs
China Soybeans, yellow organic Beijing, FOB โ‚ฌ0.78 โ‚ฌ0.76 +2.6% w/w Stable organic premium

๐ŸŒ Supply & Demand Drivers

Brazil: record harvest confirmed

The Raw Text states that Brazilโ€™s 2025/26 soybean production is projected at 177.85 million tonnes by Conab, a slight trimming from the previous 177.98 millionโ€‘tonne forecast but still an allโ€‘time high. This aligns with external projections that place the crop in a 176โ€“178 millionโ€‘tonne range, confirming a structurally recordโ€‘large Brazilian supply base for the coming season. With planted area still expanding and yields recovering from earlier weather setbacks, Brazil consolidates its position as the dominant global supplier, especially into China.

USDA and other agencies project global soybean ending stocks for 2025/26 at or near record highs above 124โ€“125 million tonnes, driven mainly by South American output growth that more than offsets incremental demand. This stock overhang weighs on the mediumโ€‘term price outlook and caps rallies, even when weather scares or geopolitical headlines appear.

United States: demand and trade policy uncertainty

On the US side, the Raw Text highlights that traders had counted on an endโ€‘March Trumpโ€“Xi summit to secure additional Chinese commitments for US soybean purchases. The prospect of a postponement โ€“ and the linkage to Chinaโ€™s role in reopening the Strait of Hormuz โ€“ introduces fresh uncertainty over Chinaโ€™s US soy buying program. With Brazil already capturing a large share of Chinaโ€™s imports in recent years, any delay or downgrade of new USโ€“China purchase agreements could further shift flows toward Brazil and other origins. External trade outlooks anticipate weaker US soybean exports in 2025/26 as Brazilโ€™s competitive edge grows.

China: structural import demand remains strong

Despite nearโ€‘term political noise, Chinaโ€™s soybean import needs remain structurally high, driven by feed demand and vegetable oil consumption. Recent years have seen record or nearโ€‘record monthly imports, increasingly sourced from Brazil, with some reports indicating China obtains around 80% of its soybean imports from Brazil. For the market, the key question is less whether China will import soybeans and more from which origins and at what pace. If USโ€“China relations deteriorate further, demand may continue to pivot toward Brazil and, to a smaller extent, Argentina and Paraguay.

Competing oilseeds and vegetable oils

The Raw Text also notes that rapeseed futures on Euronext recently hit a nineโ€‘month high before profitโ€‘taking set in, and that palm oil in Malaysia gained 4.7% last week, extending its rise into Monday. Firm crude oil prices are cited as a key supportive factor for the oilseed complex, particularly soy oil, rapeseed oil and palm oil. This crossโ€‘market link means that even if soybean meal faces headwinds from abundant global supply, the oil leg of the crush can remain relatively firm, underpinning overall crush margins and encouraging high processing volumes.

๐Ÿ“Š Fundamentals: Positioning, Crush and Stocks

Speculative positioning: heavy net longs

CFTC data in the Raw Text show that institutional investors have increased their net long positions in CBOT soybean futures and options by a further 23,205 contracts to 222,107 contracts. In soybean oil, funds added another 33,329 contracts, bringing net longs to 108,838 contracts. This confirms that managed money is heavily skewed to the long side of the market. While this has supported the recent rally, it also creates downside risk: any disappointment on trade talks, a benign weather pattern or bearish USDA/Conab updates could trigger sizable long liquidation, amplifying price corrections.

Global production and stocks snapshot

Country / Region (2025/26) Production (Mt) YoY change Comment
Brazil โ‰ˆ177.8 +3โ€“4% Record crop; area expansion, yield recovery (Conab, Raw Text)
United States ~120โ€“125 (est.) Flat / slightly lower Potentially lower exports amid Brazil competition
Argentina ~50 (est.) Recovery vs. prior drought Still weatherโ€‘sensitive; policy risks
Paraguay + others ~25โ€“30 (est.) Slight growth Incremental but important for regional exports
World total โ‰ˆ430 +2โ€“3% Stocks projected at record ~124โ€“125 Mt

These figures underline a comfortable global balance sheet. Unless there is a major weather shock in one of the key producers, the market is likely to face a ceiling on sustained rallies, particularly once speculative length is reduced.

โ˜€๏ธ Weather Outlook & Yield Risks

South America

Recent weather reports for Brazilโ€™s main soybean regions (Mato Grosso, Paranรก, Rio Grande do Sul) indicate a mixed but broadly nonโ€‘threatening pattern for the remainder of March. Forecasts suggest scattered showers in central and northern Mato Grosso, helping to maintain adequate soil moisture, while southern regions could see alternating wet and dry spells that may momentarily delay harvest but are not expected to materially impact yields under current projections.

Isolated severe weather events โ€“ including tornadoโ€‘related damage in parts of Paranรก and Rio Grande do Sul in February โ€“ have caused localized losses but are negligible at national scale given the record crop size. Overall, Brazilian yield risk appears skewed to the downside only at the margin; the larger threat to prices is demand and policy, not weather.

North America

In the US, the key weather focus is shifting toward planting conditions for the 2026 crop. Early seasonal forecasts point to generally favorable moisture across the Midwest, though with the usual uncertainty this far ahead. With global stocks ample, even a minor US weather scare would have to be significant to provide lasting price support.

๐Ÿ“‰ Macro & Geopolitical Influences

  • USโ€“China relations: The Raw Text underscores that President Trumpโ€™s hint at postponing the Trumpโ€“Xi summit and tying it to broader geopolitical concessions (Strait of Hormuz) has undermined expectations for imminent Chinese purchases of US soybeans.
  • Energy markets: High crude oil and palm oil prices support soy oil and rapeseed, indirectly underpinning soybean crush demand even as meal prices soften.
  • Currency moves: A firm US dollar versus local currencies in Brazil and Argentina could sustain their export competitiveness, pressuring US Gulf FOB values in EUR terms.

๐Ÿ“Œ Trading Outlook & Recommendations

Key takeaways for market participants

  • The Raw Text confirms we have just seen a sharp correction after a twoโ€‘year high on CBOT soybeans, driven by profitโ€‘taking and renewed trade policy uncertainty rather than a sudden change in crop fundamentals.
  • Brazilโ€™s record 177.85 Mt crop and rising global ending stocks point to a fundamentally wellโ€‘supplied market in 2025/26.
  • Speculative net long positions in soybeans and soy oil are substantial, increasing the risk of further technical selling on negative headlines.
  • Vegetable oil strength and crude oil prices provide a floor to soy oil but do not fully offset the weight of large bean and meal supplies.

For producers (farmers, cooperatives)

  • Use price rallies driven by political or weather headlines to advance hedging rather than chasing the market higher.
  • Given strong fund length and ample global stocks, consider layering in incremental sales via forward contracts or futures hedges when nearby CBOT May/July 2026 values recover toward previous highs (on a EUR/t basis).
  • Monitor basis opportunities: with FOB Ukraine and US Gulf both competitive, local basis may be more volatile than futures; use this to your advantage in timing physical sales.

For importers (crushers, feed manufacturers)

  • The recent correction offers an opportunity to extend coverage modestly, particularly for Q3โ€“Q4 2026 needs, but avoid overโ€‘committing given the risk of further downside if funds liquidate.
  • Diversify origin exposure: Brazil remains the primary supplier, but Black Sea and US origin beans can help manage logistics and political risk.
  • For crushers, watch the oil/meal spread: strong soy oil prices versus softer meal may justify higher crush rates and hedging the product slate separately.

For speculative traders

  • Risk/reward favours a cautious or moderately bearish stance after the twoโ€‘year high and in light of record Brazilian supply and heavy net long fund positioning.
  • Options strategies (e.g. buying puts financed by outโ€‘ofโ€‘theโ€‘money calls) may be preferable to outright shorts, given headlineโ€‘driven volatility from USโ€“China politics.
  • Relative value ideas include long soy oil vs. short meal or beans when crude and palm remain strong, but these should be actively managed.

๐Ÿ“† 3โ€‘Day Regional Price Outlook (in EUR)

Assuming no major new geopolitical shocks or surprise policy announcements, and with weather risks currently contained, the following directional outlook applies for the next three trading days (rolling from March 16, 2026):

Market / Contract Current level (approx. EUR) D+1 D+2 D+3 Bias
CBOT Soybeans May 2026 โ‰ˆ โ‚ฌ400/t Sideways to slightly lower Sideways Sideways to slightly higher Consolidation after sellโ€‘off
CBOT Soybean Meal May 2026 โ‰ˆ โ‚ฌ325/t Slightly lower Sideways Sideways Pressure from ample supplies
CBOT Soybean Oil May 2026 โ‰ˆ โ‚ฌ1,360/t Sideways Sideways to slightly higher Sideways Supported by vegโ€‘oil and crude
DCE Soybeans No.1 May 2026 โ‰ˆ โ‚ฌ595/t Sideways Sideways Sideways to slightly lower Import parity sensitive to CBOT
FOB US No.2 (EUR/kg) โ‚ฌ0.57 Sideways Slightly lower Sideways Follows CBOT; basis steady
FOB UA Odesa (EUR/kg) โ‚ฌ0.34 Sideways Sideways Sideways Highly competitive; floor for EU buyers

Overall, the soybean market is entering a consolidation phase after the recent spike and correction. With Raw Text fundamentals dominated by record Brazilian output, heavy speculative length and geopolitical noise around USโ€“China trade, nearโ€‘term price action is likely to be rangeโ€‘bound with a slight downward drift, punctuated by sharp but potentially shortโ€‘lived rallies on headlines.