Wheat Rebounds on Renewed Supply Risks
2026-02-18 17:56
By
Felipe Alarcon
1 min. read
Wheat futures rebounded above $5.7 per bushel, reaching the highest in 8 months as renewed weather concerns in the Black Sea region offset the broader weight of ample global supplies.
Fresh frost risks across parts of southern Russia and Ukraine have reintroduced a weather risk premium into the market, with traders reassessing potential winter crop damage after earlier US winterkill fears faded.
While Russia’s upgraded production outlook of 85.9 million tons from SovEcon and near 91 million tons from IKAR, along with India’s approval of 2.5 million tons in exports and Argentina’s near-record harvest continue to signal comfortable global availability, the market is reacting to uncertainty around crop conditions and export flows.
At the same time, currency movements and signs of steady US export demand are providing additional support.