A cinematic wide-angle shot of a modern grain cargo ship being loaded at a Southeast Asian port terminal at golden hour, with massive industrial grain elevators and conveyor systems transferring golden feed wheat into the vessel's hold

Thai Tender Excludes Black Sea Wheat; 240,000t Bought

  • Bearish for Black Sea wheat: Thailand’s tender explicitly excludes Russian and Ukrainian origins, removing a key demand outlet.
  • Steady demand for alternative origins: 240,000 tonnes of feed wheat secured on optional-origin terms, supporting exporters outside Russia, Ukraine, Brazil, and Pakistan.
  • Forward demand visibility: Shipments scheduled across H1 2026 provide longer-term demand support for non-excluded suppliers.

Thailand Tender Overview

A group of Thai importers purchased 240,000 tonnes of optional-origin feed wheat in a recent tender, with trading house Bunge selling the grain at around $250 per tonne C&F. The tender explicitly bars wheat from Russia, Ukraine, Brazil, and Pakistan, pushing demand toward alternative exporters.

Shipment Schedule and Pricing

PeriodShipment CountVolume per Shipment (tonnes)Total Volume (tonnes)Price (C&F)
Jan–Mar 2026330,00090,000$250/tonne (approx.)
Apr–Jun 2026350,000150,000$250/tonne (approx.)
Total6240,000$250/tonne (approx.)

Market Impact and Analysis

The deal is structurally bearish for Black Sea wheat, as a major Southeast Asian buyer has explicitly ruled out Russian and Ukrainian origins in a sizeable forward tender. This exclusion shrinks the potential demand pool for Black Sea exporters and highlights ongoing buyer concerns over geopolitical and logistical risk.

While the price level of about $250 per tonne C&F confirms solid demand for feed wheat, the benefits will accrue primarily to exporters in non-excluded regions. Black Sea suppliers may be forced to seek alternative markets or sharpen offers to remain competitive in long-term contracts.

Source: Market Data


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