- Prices Stable: Ukrainian wheat prices held steady last week with only marginal revisions from processors.
- Farmer Sales Limited: Producers restricted sales volumes, expecting further price appreciation and supporting current price floors.
- Narrow Port Spreads: A tight USD 3–8/t spread between milling and feed wheat at ports signals balanced quality demand.
- Volatility Risk: Export market fluctuations remain the main driver of domestic pricing and trading decisions.
Ukrainian Wheat Market Update
The Ukrainian wheat market remained broadly stable over the past week, with most processors maintaining active purchasing programs and keeping bid prices unchanged. Only a limited number of buyers attempted to stimulate additional deliveries by offering small price increases.
Farmer participation stayed constrained, with grain typically offered in small batches as producers waited for clearer price signals and potential upside. This cautious selling behavior contributed to tight nearby supply, while processors appeared adequately covered for their short-term needs.
Domestic and Export Price Ranges
| Market | Commodity | Price Range | Currency / Basis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Domestic (Ukraine) | Class 2 milling wheat | 9,700–11,000 | UAH/t CPT |
| Domestic (Ukraine) | Feed wheat | 9,000–10,500 | UAH/t CPT |
| Port (Ukraine) | Milling wheat | 216–224 | USD/t CPT port |
| Port (Ukraine) | Feed wheat | 216–219 | USD/t CPT port |
Domestic class 2 milling wheat traded in a range of UAH 9,700–11,000/t CPT, while feed wheat was quoted at UAH 9,000–10,500/t CPT. At Ukrainian ports, milling wheat values stood at USD 216–224/t CPT port, with feed wheat reported between USD 216–219/t CPT port, leaving only a narrow quality spread.
Market Sentiment and Outlook
Overall sentiment is neutral to slightly bullish. Restricted farmer selling is underpinning a floor under domestic prices in the near term, but the absence of aggressive processor bidding indicates that immediate demand is largely covered. The tight USD 3–8/t spread between milling and feed wheat at ports suggests balanced quality preferences and limited premiums for higher grades.
Export market volatility remains the primary driver of price risk. Domestic participants are closely tracking international developments and freight dynamics before committing to larger volumes. Any shift toward more active farmer selling could quickly rebalance supply and demand, potentially easing upward pressure on prices.
Source: Market Data


Leave a Reply