Account Selector

Ruralco Grain Report

Find out the latest information on the grain trade in New Zealand, as well as Australian and International market updates.

Ruralco Grain Report

Find out the latest information on the grain trade in New Zealand, as well as Australian and International market updates.

Local Market Update

  • Cereal harvest is mainly finished with some specialised crops still to come in. The consensus is that total yields for the region are down on previous years due to the poor growing season, wet winter, a cold and dry early spring, a hot and dry late spring, and a wet harvest period, along with adverse weather events such as hail.
  • With cultivation and planting beginning growers are putting a lot of consideration into what crops to sow, with growers feeling many options are struggling to stack up economically.
  • There is potential for grain pricing to lift off the back of the current fuel situation, firstly as the cost of imported feed into the country increases due to rising freight prices, secondly the increasing cost of internal freight adding to price of local deliveries.
  • PKE is trading around $430/t ex store for spot purchases. (4/3/26)
  • Champion has released a preferred variety list of milling wheats for upcoming season.
  • Industry buyers are still cautious with current grain purchases.
Ruralco is always looking for grain to supply a wide range of end users. If you have free or uncontracted grain that you would like to sell, please contact the Ruralco Seed team. Drop your sample at any Ruralco Store, contact your Ruralco Representative, or call the Ruralco Customer Service Centre on 03 307 5100 to arrange sample bags or pick up. For queries about free or uncontracted grain that you would like to sell please contact the Ruralco Seed Team below.
Content updated as at 7 April 2026.

Canterbury Growers Pricing Per Tonne*

Canterbury Growers pricing per tonne for feed barley, feed wheat and milling wheat
*Nominal pricing, indicative only & subject to change.

Import Pricing Per Tonne*

Import pricing per tonne for feed barley and feed wheat
*Pricing at 10 March 2026.

Feed Wheat Comparison

Feed wheat comparison

Feed Barley Comparison

Feed barley comparison

Australian Update

Feedgrain Focus: Volatility kills volume, short trips appeal. Liz Wells, 2 April 2026. Source: Grain Central.
Values have firmed this week as high fuel prices stymie sales to port precincts and push business into up-country sites. In the south, growers have started planting their winter crop, and are hard-pressed to find a reason to deliver grain to ports or capital cities without the assurance of bringing home a backload of urea, now in limited supply due to conflict centred on the Persian Gulf.
In New South Wales, much of the state to the north and west of the south-west slopes remains dry, and mixed farmers outside the summer-cropping regions are concentrating their efforts on livestock as they wait for soaking rain.

In Queensland and northern NSW, the need to top-dress winter crops grown in heavy soils means plenty of growers are considering fallowing until spring, when they can plant a summer crop, hopefully with cheaper and more plentiful urea.

Warehousing sales lift in north
Volume sold out of warehousing has lifted in the past week to counter grower reluctance to sell grain stored on farm amid shaky prospects for winter-crop planting. While most of the Darling Downs has had good rain in recent weeks, the outer western Downs and much of NSW has limited subsoil moisture.

Growers across NSW and into Qld are hoping for solid rain by May to make a timely start on winter-crop planting; if it does not materialise, they can opt for more grazing, a summer crop, or low-input winter crops.

The area in question broadly runs from Condobolin to the Newell Highway, and north across the Qld border to the west of Moonie. Clocking this dryness, and the impact of expensive fuel, some feedlots have in recent weeks extended their coverage out to September-October, when new-crop cereals should become available.

Knight Commodities Goondiwindi-based broker Gerard Doherty said buying out of depots has ramped up, and the market has “been well engaged on both sides”. Highly variable subsoil moisture levels across the north are a factor.

“We’ve got an enormous amount of discretionary area that’s dry, but because of the cost of diesel and urea, guys are holding stock on farm,” Mr Doherty said.

New-crop trade remains illiquid, based on uncertainty about not just the season but on input and fuel pricing too. “It looks like $400 a tonne for SFW January is possible.”

Mr Doherty said milling interest on H2 wheat was evident in Brisbane, but expensive fuel had trucking companies more interested in carting locally. “If you can get $380/t ex farm Moonie, why would you chase an extra $10 to go to Brisbane?

“Premiums are not enough to go down the Range with white grain.”

Sources have told Grain Central that sufficient fuel for weed spraying and planting is turning up across the grainbelt, but urea to follow planting fertiliser is in short supply. However, some is working as a backload on grain coming into Brisbane.

Darwalla Milling feeds manager Gary Heidenreich said southern Qld delivered grain markets are volatile, based on fuel uncertainty rather than fluctuating global grain values. “A lot of freight companies are too afraid to commit to a freight rate, so traders and brokers don’t want to commit to a price.

“We’ve seen bids go up $5 or $10 in a day, and wheat and barley are up there on level pegging now.”

Darwalla is a poultry producer, and Mr Heidenrich said the relative flatness of the sorghum market means they are “starting to try and put a bit of sorghum” of varying grades into their rations.

South gets moving on vetch
Widespread rain over recent weeks has kicked off a solid season for the south. However, its fuel and fertiliser supplies are no more secure than the north’s.

Many southern cropping operations also run sheep, and vetch is being planted across southern Australia either as a sheep feed, or as a brown manure crop to protect soil over the summer months. “There’s more vetch going in than anything else,” Pinion Advisory Horsham-based broker Andy Brown said.

Urea prices appear to have stabilised at around $1400-$1450/t ex port depot, around 65 percent up from its values prior to the Iran-based conflict breaking out on February 28. However, planting intentions are tipped to undergo only minor changes, although in-crop nutrition may be pulled back for all crops bar canola.

“The majority will stick with their rotations.”

In the Mallee, the wheat-barley-pulse rotation is popular, which means growers planting wheat may rely solely or partially on nitrogen built up in the pulse phase. Mr Brown said buyers were wanting to book grain as far out as July, but growers were only interested in selling one week out because of the uncertainty around fuel pricing, and limited opportunities to backload with fertiliser from port.
“We’re selling more week to week at this stage.”

In his weekly report issued on Monday, Clear Grain Exchange managing director Nathan Cattle said a stronger Chicago wheat market and weaker Australian dollar helped buyers manage the risk of purchasing grain from growers at better prices. This saw domestic end users step in last week to secure more cover, possibly due to prices looking more supported and growers about to start seeding.

 “The result was buyers being able to crunch their numbers and bid on firm offers at higher prices than growers may have seen elsewhere,” Mr Cattle said in his report.

‘The number of buyers searching and bidding for Australian grain through the exchange remains high and is an indicator of demand and support for prices.”

“Grain was regularly trading at better prices than best published bids or cash prices.

“Lower-grade wheat was trading at much higher prices than best cash prices indicated early in the week through central NSW, with appetite for those grades fading later in the week.”

World Market Update

Source: International Grains Council, 19 March 2026.
MIDDLE EAST CONFLICT
The conflict in the Middle East has sparked concerns about risks to agricultural supply chains, particularly related to rising fertiliser costs and higher fuel prices. The Strait of Hormuz, the waterway linking the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Sea, serves as the maritime exit point for approximately 25% of the world’s oil supply and 20% of liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports. The region is also a major hub for fertiliser production and trade, accounting for as much as 35% of global urea exports and up to 30% of ammonia shipments. In the absence of strategic stockpiles and, with existing constraints is some other suppliers, recent shipping disruptions and closure of some local production facilities have sparked steep gains in fertiliser prices.

Although most northern hemisphere grains and oilseed producers are assumed to be sufficiently well covered heading into the spring fieldwork period, an extended crisis might affect planting decisions elsewhere later in the year, with parts of Asia and Africa especially dependent on Gulf fertiliser supplies. More broadly, a prolonged disruption could lead to a revaluation of fertiliser application rates, with possible implications for yields and crop quality.

The conflict has also exposed regional food security vulnerabilities. On average, around 2m t of grains, oilseeds and associated products are delivered monthly to the Persian Gulf via the Strait of Hormuz. Although only accounting for around 3% of total trade, Persian Gulf countries are highly dependent on imports, with elevated per capita consumption of wheat and rice also notable in some countries. With the main maritime supply line effectively closed, alternative routes are also limited, but with some re-routing possible via the Red Sea shipping lane or Caspian Sea. While local reserves should provide a short term buffer, food supply challenges could build should disruptions extend beyond a few months.

HIGHLIGHTS
The forecast for global total grains (wheat and coarse grains) production in 2025/26 is hiked by 10m t m/m (month-on-month), to 2,470m, mainly on upgrades for maize (including India) and wheat (Russia, Australia). Most of the larger supply is absorbed by increased consumption, pegged 8m t higher, at 2,423m, but with the stocks estimate (aggregate of respective local marketing years) also upgraded, to 632m.

Tied to a projected reduction in harvested area and yields, world total grains output is projected to drop by 2% in 2026/27. With a high level of opening stocks offering only partial offsetting, total supply is forecast slightly down y/y (year-on-year). Consumption is forecast to increase for a fourth year in a row, to a new record, led by gains in food and industrial uses. After an accumulation in the prior season, carryover stocks could tighten again, while trade is forecast to be little changed overall.

Reflecting downgraded figures for Brazil and India, world soyabean output in 2025/26 is seen 2m t lower m/m, at 426m, just a shade down y/y; accordingly, fractional downward adjustments are made to total use and stocks. Looking ahead, a record world outturn is tentatively anticipated in 2026/27 and, given heavy availabilities, processing is projected at a new peak, as stocks edge higher. Traded volumes could expand by 2% on shipment flows between South America and Asia.

There are few changes to the 2025/26 global rice supply and demand outlook, with trade expected to climb to a record of 59.5m t (+2%). Based on modest acreage gains and trend yields, world production is projected at a peak in 2026/27. Increases are also predicted for both consumption and trade, rising to fresh highs, while global stocks are seen expanding on accumulation in India.
With mixed movements across the component commodities, the IGC Grains and Oilseeds Index (GOI) gained by 1% m/m.

At 2,470m t, world total grains production will be the largest on record in 2025/26, up by 143m t y/y, including solid gains in maize (+79m), wheat (+44m) and barley (+11m). While consumption is also forecast at a new peak (+73m t), the large supply boost will enable some stock rebuilding, pegged at a six-year high of 632m (+47m). Led by larger wheat and maize flows, total trade could reach 632m t, a y/y gain of 25m.

Global wheat and coarse grains harvests are projected to be smaller in 2026/27, with cumulative output seen 53m t below the prior season's record, at 2,417m. Total supply is expected contract for the first time in four seasons, but could still be in excess of 3.0bn t. Despite an anticipated modest slowdown in consumption growth, uptake is tentatively seen 17m t higher, at 2,440m. Cumulative end-season inventories are placed at 609m t, down by 23m y/y, with most of the fall in the major exporters.

Boosted by Asian demand, global soyabean trade is projected at a new peak in 2025/26, with South American suppliers seen taking a great share of overall volumes. With acreage gains in major exporters anticipated, world harvested area is tentatively predicted to rebound in 2026/27 as production reaches a record of 442m t (+4%). Since the net increase in supplies is broadly matched by growth in total use, combined inventories are seen little-changed y/y. Trade is projected at a high of 190m t (+2%).

After a year of record production and consumption, the Council's projections for 2026/27 point to a further increase in global rice output, while growing populations in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia are expected to boost world use. The resulting expansion in food requirements is seen underpinning gains in trade, predicted at a new peak of 60.9m t (+2%).

After touching a record in 2025/26, world broad beans output could fall slightly in 2026/27. However, with uptake likely to expand further on gains in North Africa, inventories may tighten. Trade in 2027 is tentatively pegged at 1.3m t, near-unchanged y/y and above average, underpinned by shipments to North Africa, Europe and the Near East.

MARKET SUMMARY
Grains export prices mostly firmed in the period since the last report, partly reflecting linkages to rising energy markets. Crude oil strength also offered support to soyabean values, but with renewed uncertainty about future Chinese demand weighing more recently. While average rice prices were also softer, the IGC GOI gained by 1% m/m.

With global wheat markets often taking direction from broader geopolitical developments and surging crude oil values, the IGC GOI wheat sub-Index strengthened by a net 6%. US price support also stemmed from local weather worries.

Boosted by spillover from energy markets and overall strong demand, the IGC GOI maize sub-Index was 2% higher compared to the February GMR, recently touching a 10-month peak.

The IGC GOI rice-sub-Index eased by 3%. Traders reported subdued buying interest, partly tied to volatility in both container and dry bulk shipping rates amid ongoing hostilities in the Persian Gulf.

The IGC GOI soyabeans sub-Index was 1% softer, chiefly on a retreat in fob values in Argentina

World Estimates
FMG arable crop cover

Meet our experts in agronomy, providing you with a complete and personalised on-farm solution

Picture of John Scott
John Scott
Seed Sales Manager
027 227 7048
Picture of Steve Lawson
Steve Lawson
Senior Agronomist
027 245 5661
Picture of Nicola Pace
Nicola Pace
Senior Agronomist
027 229 9764
Picture of Andrea Smith
Andrea Smith
Trainee Agronomist
027 286 0579
Picture of Will Armstrong
Will Armstrong
Retail Sales Assistant
027 221 5598
About Us
Ruralco is a values-led farming co-operative since 1963. We make your farming life easier with the convenience of one card to use online or in store with one statement for consolidated spend & improved cashflow.

Through our supplier network we offer competitive pricing with real value to meet the needs of your farming business.

We are experts in agriculture, providing a complete solution with personalised farming advice and the latest innovations, on farm, instore or online.

Learn more
Annual Report
Connect With Us
© Ruralco 2026 | Developed & Integrated by Acumen Online | Ruralco is the trading name for Ashburton Trading Society, a New Zealand owned co-operative