Wheat Rebounds on Renewed Supply Risks
2026-02-05 18:02
By
Felipe Alarcon
1 min. read
Wheat futures rose past $5.35 per bushel rebounding toward eight week highs last seen January 29th amid supply risks and firm demand signals.
Renewed bouts of severe cold across the US Plains and parts of southern Russia revived concerns over winterkill for already stressed crops, tightening supply expectations after recent dryness limited protective snow cover in key regions.
In the Black Sea, weather disruptions and lingering logistical frictions continued to constrain export flows, while uncertainty around Russia’s upcoming export quota reinforced expectations that global availability could tighten later in the marketing year.
On the demand side, US export sales remained steady as buyers sought to diversify away from Black Sea origins amid rising delivery risk, lending support to nearby prices.
Although global inventories remain elevated, the rebound reflects a repricing of downside risk to production and exportable supply.