A high-resolution, cinematic overhead shot of three distinct grain piles on a modern Russian grain terminal floor: golden wheat dominating the foreground in a large mound, a smaller pile of darker rye grains to the left, and pale barley grains to the right

Russian Wheat Intervention Prices Cut for 2026/27

  • Policy Shift: Russia proposes lower wheat intervention price thresholds for 2026/27, signaling expectations of ample supply and less downside price support for producers.
  • Grain Mix Divergence: Rye intervention prices are set to rise while barley remains unchanged, highlighting differing supply-demand dynamics across grains.
  • Market Impact: Lower wheat thresholds are neutral to slightly bearish for Russian wheat in the medium term but could support export competitiveness if domestic prices soften.

Russia Proposes New Grain Intervention Price Levels for 2026/27

The Russian Ministry of Agriculture has proposed a reduction in maximum wheat price levels that trigger state grain interventions for the 2026/27 agricultural year (July 1, 2026 – June 30, 2027). The draft order, approved by the Federal Antimonopoly Service and published on regulation.gov.ru, would apply across all Russian regions and adjusts thresholds for both procurement (state purchases) and commodity (state sales) interventions.

Proposed Wheat Intervention Prices

Commodity Intervention Type Season Price with VAT (RUB/ton) Price ex-VAT (RUB/ton)
Wheat Class 3 Procurement 2025/26 (current) 14,850 n/a
Wheat Class 3 Procurement 2026/27 (proposed) 14,630 13,300
Wheat Class 4 Procurement 2025/26 (current) 14,190 n/a
Wheat Class 4 Procurement 2026/27 (proposed) 13,970 12,700
Wheat Class 3 Commodity (Sales) 2025/26 (current) 16,390 n/a
Wheat Class 3 Commodity (Sales) 2026/27 (proposed) 16,060 14,600
Wheat Class 4 Commodity (Sales) 2025/26 (current) 15,620 n/a
Wheat Class 4 Commodity (Sales) 2026/27 (proposed) 15,400 n/a

The changes imply a reduction of roughly 220–330 RUB/ton in wheat intervention thresholds compared with 2025/26 levels. This softens the price floor that would otherwise support domestic wheat markets during periods of oversupply or seasonal weakness.

Rye and Barley Intervention Prices

Commodity Intervention Type Season Price with VAT (RUB/ton) Change vs 2025/26 (RUB/ton)
Rye Class 3 Procurement 2025/26 (current) 11,770
Rye Class 3 Procurement 2026/27 (proposed) 12,320 +550
Rye Class 3 Commodity (Sales) 2025/26 (current) 12,980
Rye Class 3 Commodity (Sales) 2026/27 (proposed) 13,530 +550
Barley Procurement 2025/26 (current) 12,540 0
Barley Procurement 2026/27 (proposed) 12,540 0
Barley Commodity (Sales) 2025/26 (current) 13,750 0
Barley Commodity (Sales) 2026/27 (proposed) 13,750 0

In contrast to wheat, rye Class 3 intervention prices are set to increase by 500–550 RUB/ton across procurement and sales operations, pointing to relatively tighter rye supply expectations. Barley thresholds are left unchanged, suggesting a more balanced outlook for that market.

State Grain Fund and Intervention Activity

Metric Value
State grain fund holdings (approx.) 4.0 million tons
Approved sales quota for 2025 Up to 3.0 million tons
Actual sales (Jan 27 – Jun 30, 2025) 282,180 tons
Sales value (Jan 27 – Jun 30, 2025) 3.7 billion RUB

Russia’s state intervention fund currently holds around 4 million tons of grain, predominantly wheat. Despite authorization to sell up to 3 million tons in 2025, only 282,180 tons had been sold via the National Commodity Exchange by the end of June 2025, totaling 3.7 billion rubles. The sizable remaining stocks add to the perception of comfortable domestic supply heading into future seasons.

Market Implications

The reduction in wheat intervention floors signals that authorities expect adequate domestic availability and do not see the need for as strong a price backstop in 2026/27. For producers, this lowers downside price protection, particularly in years of bumper crops. For exporters, however, the policy could support Russia’s competitiveness in global wheat markets if domestic prices drift lower toward the new, reduced intervention thresholds.

Rye’s higher thresholds highlight relatively tighter supply expectations and may provide firmer domestic support for that grain, while unchanged barley levels point to a relatively steady outlook. Overall, the intervention changes are neutral to slightly bearish for Russian wheat prices in the medium term and warrant close monitoring of FOB quotes and Black Sea export dynamics as domestic prices interact with the revised state thresholds.

Source: Market Data


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