Rubber Futures Retreat
2026-05-15 08:53
By
Kyrie Dichosa
1 min. read
Rubber futures dropped over 4% to around 220 US cents per kilogram in May, retreating from an over nine-year high as an earlier speculative-driven rally lost momentum.
The rally had been fueled by concerns over tighter supply due to weather-related disruptions, with Thailand, the world’s largest producer, expected to see heavy rainfall in the coming week, raising risks of flash floods and river overflows in key southern rubber-growing regions.
However, as prices climbed, elevated physical rubber prices began to squeeze margins for buyers and processors, weakening profitability and prompting end-users to scale back immediate purchases.
This cooling spot demand fed back into futures pricing, with traders becoming more cautious on procurement and reassessing near-term demand strength.
Meanwhile, higher crude oil continued to provide support, as Middle East tensions kept it elevated.
This lifted synthetic rubber costs, making natural rubber more attractive.