- Neutral for wheat: Resurs Group’s wheat exports held steady at 1 million tonnes, with Egypt tripling purchases, indicating firm demand but no clear supply squeeze.
- Slightly bearish for oilseeds: A 10% drop in sunflower oil exports and pricing pressure in oilseed markets suggest softer fundamentals despite ongoing regional demand.
- Supportive for Black Sea grain flows: Armenia’s 7% grain import growth and broader geographic diversification by Russian exporters underpin steady regional demand and evolving trade routes.
Resurs Group Wheat Export Performance
Russia’s Resurs Group maintained wheat exports at 1 million tonnes in 2025, matching 2024 volumes and signaling stable supply-demand dynamics. Egypt sharply increased its role as a core buyer, nearly tripling purchases to 786,900 tonnes, consolidating its position as the key outlet for the company’s wheat flows. Turkey followed with 136,600 tonnes, while Bangladesh ranked third at 43,500 tonnes, highlighting a diversified but Egypt-centric customer mix.
| Destination | Wheat Imports from Resurs Group (tonnes, 2025) |
|---|---|
| Total Exports | 1,000,000 |
| Egypt | 786,900 |
| Turkey | 136,600 |
| Bangladesh | 43,500 |
Sunflower Oil Export Trends
Sunflower oil exports from Resurs Group totaled 205,000 tonnes across 19 countries in 2025, representing a 10% year-on-year decline linked to softer oilseed market conditions. Turkey remained the leading buyer with 107,000 tonnes, while India doubled purchases to 44,400 tonnes, moving into second place. China imported 17,000 tonnes, and additional growth was noted into Jordan, Kazakhstan, the UAE, and Turkmenistan, underscoring widening geographic reach even as overall volumes eased.
| Destination | Sunflower Oil Imports (tonnes, 2025) |
|---|---|
| Total Exports | 205,000 |
| Turkey | 107,000 |
| India | 44,400 |
| China | 17,000 |
Product Portfolio Expansion
Resurs Group continued diversifying beyond bulk grains and oils, adding deli meats, pasta, and hatching eggs to its export lineup. Grain offerings were broadened with mustard, lentils, peas, and bran supplementing established wheat, corn, and barley flows. This product mix expansion positions the company to capture additional margins while spreading risk across multiple agricultural segments and destination markets.
Armenia’s Growing Grain Import Demand
Armenia’s total grain imports increased by 7% in volume and 4% in value in 2025 to 480,200 tonnes, worth $124.8 million. The country’s import structure remains dominated by wheat at 332,100 tonnes, followed by corn at 76,400 tonnes and barley at 58,600 tonnes. Rice and oats contributed 11,500 tonnes and 1,100 tonnes respectively, reinforcing Armenia’s role as a stable regional outlet for Black Sea grain exporters.
| Commodity | Armenian Imports (tonnes, 2025) | Value (USD million) |
|---|---|---|
| Total Grain | 480,200 | 124.8 |
| Wheat | 332,100 | – |
| Corn | 76,400 | – |
| Barley | 58,600 | – |
| Rice | 11,500 | – |
| Oats | 1,100 | – |
Market Impact and Price Signal
For Black Sea wheat, the picture is neutral to slightly supportive: Resurs Group’s flat export volumes indicate sufficient supply, yet Egypt’s aggressive purchasing from Russian origins could gradually limit availability from alternative Black Sea suppliers and underpin regional values. In contrast, the 10% drop in sunflower oil exports highlights ongoing pricing pressure in oilseed markets, aligning with softer sentiment for vegetable oils even as trade flows broaden geographically.
Armenia’s steady import growth and Russia’s diversification into African, Middle Eastern, and Asian destinations suggest a maturing export strategy that may alter traditional freight routes and vessel deployment patterns in the Black Sea. This evolving logistics landscape bears watching for freight rates, port congestion risks, and relative competitiveness among regional exporters.
Source: Market Data


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