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Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Wheat has staged one of the strongest rallies across the commodity sector this week, with Paris milling wheat climbing around 8% in two sessions to a 17-month high, while Chicago Soft Red Winter and Kansas Hard Red Winter wheat futures have reached their highest levels in almost two months. The move reflects a combination of renewed geopolitical tensions, deteriorating crop prospects in parts of Europe and increasingly stretched speculative positioning that has forced bearish investors to rapidly cover short positions.
Ukraine's main farmers' union estimates the country has already lost about one-third of its grain export capacity through its vital Black Sea ports following repeated Russian missile and drone strikes on port infrastructure. At the same time, Ukrainian attacks have disrupted shipping through Russia's Sea of Azov export corridor, a route that normally handles around one-quarter of Russian wheat exports.
Together, these developments have raised concerns that both of the world's largest Black Sea exporters may struggle to move grain efficiently to global buyers just as the Northern Hemisphere harvest gathers pace. However, despite obvious comparisons with 2022, today's market backdrop is fundamentally different.
When Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022, the conflict erupted just before the Northern Hemisphere spring planting and growing season. Markets were forced to price not only the risk of severe export disruptions but also the possibility of a substantial loss of production across both Ukraine and parts of Russia. That combination of collapsing exports and uncertain crop prospects sent Paris milling wheat briefly to a record EUR 450 per tonne. This time, the market is primarily pricing logistical risk rather than production risk.
Both Russia and Ukraine are still expected to harvest sizeable wheat crops this season, and global production remains historically high. The concern is increasingly whether those crops can reach international markets smoothly rather than whether they will be produced in the first place.
That distinction matters because export disruptions can often be mitigated over time through alternative routes, higher freight costs and logistical adjustments, whereas a poor harvest permanently removes supply from the global balance sheet.
That said, the global market is less comfortable than headline inventory numbers suggest. While global wheat stocks remain relatively large, a significant share is held in China and therefore unavailable to international buyers. Stocks held by the major exporting countries continue to tighten, while US wheat production is forecast to fall to its lowest level since 1970. This leaves importing countries with a smaller export buffer should Black Sea disruptions intensify.
France, the European Union's largest wheat producer, is expected to harvest around 32 million tonnes this year, approximately 4% less than last season after repeated heatwaves reduced yields during the final stages of crop development. Elsewhere, developing El Niño conditions are beginning to raise concerns about moisture deficits across Australia later this year, although any weather-related impact remains highly uncertain at this stage.
Prior to the latest advance, managed money held a net short position of more than 62,000 CBOT wheat contracts, leaving the market vulnerable to a sharp short-covering squeeze once prices started to break higher. While fresh fundamental concerns provided the spark, the speed of the rally has probably been magnified by funds rushing to exit bearish positions.
In addition, the prospect of a tightening market has in the past two months more than halved the 12-month contango in the Chicago wheat futures to around 5% from above 10%, reducing the carry available to short sellers and making it more costly to maintain bearish positions. This has increased the incentive for speculative traders to cover shorts and potentially shift toward a more neutral or even long bias.
Whether this develops into a more sustained bull market will depend on what happens next in the Black Sea. If export disruptions worsen and weather problems spread to additional producing regions, prices could extend higher. However, absent a meaningful deterioration in global production prospects, today's rally still looks fundamentally different from the extraordinary supply shock witnessed in 2022.
For now, the market is repricing logistical risk rather than anticipating another global production crisis - a distinction that should help limit upside, even as volatility remains elevated.
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