Key Takeaways
- Ukraine’s corn harvest is delayed by high grain moisture, with about a third of the crop still unharvested, mostly in the north and west.
- Elevator bottlenecks due to slow drying are restricting the inflow of new corn to market, causing capacity shortages.
- Spot corn prices remain firm and above forward values, showing bullish short-term sentiment due to tight supply.
Market Update
Difficult harvesting conditions continue to limit Ukrainian corn flow. Farmers have collected nearly 21 million tons, but roughly one-third remains in the field, primarily in the northern and western regions. High grain moisture is the main constraint, with corn needing a further 10-12% reduction before storage and shipment. This slows elevator operations, leading to capacity shortages and even temporary intake suspensions at some facilities.
The result is a tightly supplied spot market. Spot prices for Ukrainian corn are consistently above forward rates, indicating near-term supply concerns.
| Metric | Price |
|---|---|
| Spot Price (USD/ton CPT) | $211 – $212 |
| Spot Price (UAH/ton CPT) | 10,100 – 10,200 |
Analysts expect the upward direction to persist, projecting possible gains of $1-2 per ton weekly as logistical bottlenecks dominate market sentiment.
Analysis
Bullish: The logistical constraint from drying bottlenecks—not any crop shortfall—is supporting a spot market premium (backwardation). Domestic prices are tight and CPT values remain high. However, traders should watch for improvements in weather or elevator throughput, as they could unlock a surge of grain and pressure prices. For now, the key bullish factor remains restricted flow from high-moisture corn and elevator capacity limits.

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