Barley Monthly Price - Swedish Krona per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2011 - Aug 2020: -585.934 (-45.55%)
Chart

Description: Barley (US) feed, No. 2, spot, 20 days To-Arrive, delivered Minneapolis from May 2012 onwards; during 1980 - 2012 April Canadian, feed, Western No. 1, Winnipeg Commodity Exchange, spot, wholesale farmers' price

Unit: Swedish Krona per Metric Ton



Source: US Department of Agriculture; Bloomberg; World Bank.

See also: Barley production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Barley is a temperate cereal grain grown for animal feed, malting, and food use. In commodity markets it is commonly priced as bulk grain in US dollars per metric ton, with benchmark quotations often referring to exportable feed or malting barley of specified origin and quality. A widely used reference is barley of German origin, quoted on a spot basis in USD per metric ton. Barley is traded in physical markets and, in some regions, through futures-linked pricing relationships with other feed grains.

The grain is used primarily in livestock rations, especially for cattle, pigs, and sheep, where it serves as an energy source and can substitute for corn, wheat, or sorghum depending on local feed formulations. A smaller share is used for malting, where grain quality, protein content, and germination characteristics are critical because barley is the principal raw material for malt in beer and some distilled spirits. Food use is more limited but remains important in certain cuisines and in products such as pearl barley, flakes, and flour.

Supply Drivers

Barley supply is shaped by its role as a cool-season crop and by the geography of temperate agriculture. Major producing regions include the European Union, Russia, Canada, Australia, Ukraine, and parts of the Middle East and North Africa. These areas combine suitable growing temperatures, seasonal rainfall patterns, and large areas of cereal production. In drier regions, barley is often favored over more water-demanding crops because it tolerates moisture stress better than many alternatives.

Production is highly sensitive to weather during planting, tillering, heading, and grain fill. Excess heat, drought, frost, and untimely rain can reduce both yield and malting quality. Because barley is harvested annually, supply responds to each crop cycle rather than to continuous extraction, and acreage decisions are influenced by relative prices for wheat, corn, and oilseeds. Soil fertility, disease pressure, and lodging risk also matter, especially for malting grades that require uniform kernels and low contamination.

Storage, inland transport, and port logistics affect export availability. Barley is bulky relative to value, so freight costs and rail or river bottlenecks can shape regional price spreads. Quality segregation is important because feed and malting barley are not fully interchangeable, and post-harvest handling can determine whether grain meets brewing specifications.

Demand Drivers

Demand for barley comes mainly from livestock feed and malting. Feed demand is tied to meat, dairy, and poultry production, with barley often used where local feed rations favor it over corn or wheat. Its role in feed markets depends on relative prices, nutritional value, and regional livestock systems. In colder or drier producing areas, barley can be a practical feed grain because it is locally available and fits crop rotations.

Malting demand is more specialized and depends on brewing and distilling activity. Maltsters require barley with consistent kernel size, low protein variability, and strong germination performance. This creates a premium for specific varieties and grades, and it separates malting barley from lower-grade feed barley. Food demand is smaller but relatively stable, supported by traditional consumption in soups, cereals, and specialty products.

Barley also competes with corn, wheat, sorghum, and oats in feed use, so substitution is an important long-run demand mechanism. Seasonal patterns matter because livestock feeding, malting procurement, and harvest timing influence local availability. Demand is also shaped by population growth, urbanization, and dietary shifts that affect meat, beer, and processed food consumption.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Barley prices are influenced by broad grain-market conditions, especially the US dollar exchange rate, because internationally traded cereals are commonly priced in dollars. A stronger dollar tends to make dollar-denominated grain more expensive for non-dollar buyers, while a weaker dollar can support import demand. Interest rates matter through inventory financing and storage costs: when carrying grain is expensive, nearby prices can strengthen relative to deferred prices, and when storage is abundant, forward curves can reflect larger carry.

Barley often trades in relation to other feed grains, so price relationships with corn and wheat are important. Freight costs, energy prices, and general inflation affect handling and transport, which are significant in a low-margin bulk commodity. Because barley is storable, market structure can shift between contango and backwardation depending on harvest timing, local supply tightness, and the cost of holding inventories.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 20111,286.43-
Apr 20111,298.410.93%
May 20111,304.510.47%
Jun 20111,331.642.08%
Jul 20111,381.863.77%
Aug 20111,318.32-4.60%
Sep 20111,390.905.51%
Oct 20111,389.09-0.13%
Nov 20111,422.262.39%
Dec 20111,453.092.17%
Jan 20121,439.75-0.92%
Feb 20121,423.16-1.15%
Mar 20121,499.335.35%
Apr 20121,596.056.45%
May 20121,681.085.33%
Jun 20121,675.63-0.32%
Jul 20121,763.605.25%
Aug 20121,776.600.74%
Sep 20121,693.90-4.65%
Oct 20121,679.21-0.87%
Nov 20121,692.560.80%
Dec 20121,607.03-5.05%
Jan 20131,514.11-5.78%
Feb 20131,508.95-0.34%
Mar 20131,543.512.29%
Apr 20131,490.09-3.46%
May 20131,532.252.83%
Jun 20131,510.39-1.43%
Jul 20131,415.31-6.30%
Aug 20131,209.67-14.53%
Sep 20131,038.69-14.13%
Oct 2013997.47-3.97%
Nov 20131,046.574.92%
Dec 20131,057.441.04%
Jan 20141,086.882.78%
Feb 20141,104.801.65%
Mar 20141,139.163.11%
Apr 20141,186.464.15%
May 20141,193.800.62%
Jun 20141,070.96-10.29%
Jul 2014945.27-11.74%
Aug 2014817.53-13.51%
Sep 2014753.01-7.89%
Oct 2014811.157.72%
Nov 2014844.274.08%
Dec 2014937.2611.01%
Jan 20151,040.1110.97%
Feb 20151,046.310.60%
Mar 20151,076.872.92%
Apr 20151,118.923.91%
May 20151,057.16-5.52%
Jun 2015984.51-6.87%
Jul 20151,057.447.41%
Aug 2015946.16-10.52%
Sep 2015917.88-2.99%
Oct 2015983.117.11%
Nov 20151,035.325.31%
Dec 20151,015.16-1.95%
Jan 20161,011.19-0.39%
Feb 2016970.93-3.98%
Mar 2016946.86-2.48%
Apr 2016913.79-3.49%
May 2016920.410.72%
Jun 2016898.48-2.38%
Jul 2016916.852.04%
Aug 2016808.96-11.77%
Sep 2016764.11-5.54%
Oct 2016802.995.09%
Nov 2016835.814.09%
Dec 2016846.241.25%
Jan 2017822.20-2.84%
Feb 2017816.66-0.67%
Mar 2017830.941.75%
Apr 2017842.251.36%
May 2017827.62-1.74%
Jun 2017818.93-1.05%
Jul 2017784.17-4.24%
Aug 2017780.17-0.51%
Sep 2017771.67-1.09%
Oct 2017787.582.06%
Nov 2017909.7615.51%
Dec 20171,006.8310.67%
Jan 2018981.50-2.52%
Feb 20181,037.025.66%
Mar 20181,077.933.95%
Apr 20181,105.572.56%
May 20181,146.863.73%
Jun 20181,151.690.42%
Jul 20181,155.070.29%
Aug 20181,157.070.17%
Sep 20181,069.56-7.56%
Oct 20181,078.710.86%
Nov 20181,081.520.26%
Dec 20181,078.74-0.26%
Jan 20191,073.03-0.53%
Feb 20191,105.573.03%
Mar 20191,108.900.30%
Apr 20191,271.7614.69%
May 20191,434.0412.76%
Jun 20191,405.08-2.02%
Jul 20191,404.48-0.04%
Aug 20191,302.23-7.28%
Sep 20191,115.03-14.38%
Oct 20191,122.910.71%
Nov 20191,107.38-1.38%
Dec 20191,084.19-2.09%
Jan 20201,091.870.71%
Feb 20201,112.281.87%
Mar 20201,127.661.38%
Apr 20201,150.812.05%
May 2020783.33-31.93%
Jun 2020747.73-4.54%
Jul 2020725.30-3.00%
Aug 2020700.50-3.42%

Top Companies

Soufflet
Website: http://www.soufflet.com/en/Malthouse
Location: Nogent-sur-Seine, France

Commodities Market

  • Buyers: Request price quotes
  • Sellers: List your products
Sign up to get an email when we update our commodities data

 


Your email will never be shared, sold, nor rented. We hate SPAM as much you do.
Coming Soon