Posted on January, 21, 2024 at 10:33 pm
Slower EU wheat exports contributed to lower European and so UK wheat prices in the first half of the 2023/24 marketing season.
EU exports are 7% slower than last season at 16.9 Mt (1 Jul - 14 Jan, EU Commission customs surveillance data). This equates to just 54% of the EU Commission’s current export forecast for the season (31.0 Mt). Last season, the EU had exported 57% of the full season total by this point in the year and 60% in 2021/22. The export pace needs to increase to prevent EU wheat stocks rising, given the stronger import pace. The EU has already imported 79% of its full season forecast, versus just 51% by this point last season.
One of the key reasons the EU export pace has struggled is competition from Black Sea, particularly Russian supplies.
The 2023 Russian wheat crop was very large at an estimated 91.0 Mt, just 1.0 Mt below last year’s record (USDA). Despite the export price regulations, Russian wheat has still been highly competitive and exports got off to a rapid start. The strong pace continued into winter and SovEcon estimates Russia will have exported over 30 Mt by the end of this month (LSEG). This would be 15% more than the first seven months of 2022/23.
But there are signs that the price pressure from Black Sea exports could be starting to ease. The gap between EU and Russian prices has narrowed and Egypt’s state-buyer, GASC, bought French wheat for the first time in five and a half months this week. GASC bought 60Kt of French wheat for a reported $284.50/t cost and freight, slightly ($0.70/t) below the purchase prices reported for Russian wheat (LSEG).
One factor that has likely helped EU wheat become more competitive is that the euro weakening against the US dollar from where it was in December.
SovEcon forecasts that Russian wheat exports could total 48.6 Mt this season. To hit that target, Russia will still need to ship around 3.7 Mt each month from February to June, but down from the average of 4.3 Mt so far this season. There’s also reports that Ukraine exports could drop 20% in January down due to the issues around the Suez canal and in the Red Sea.
This could mean greater opportunities for EU exports and perhaps some relief in terms of price pressure on European, and so UK wheat prices in the remainder of the 2023/24 season. Though it’s unlikely to mean much support as there is still a large volume of Russian wheat to ship.