Poultry (chicken) Monthly Price - Russian Ruble per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Jun 2025: -0.684 (-0.49%)
Chart

Description: Meat, chicken (US), broiler/fryer, whole birds, 2-1/2 to 3 pounds, USDA grade "A", ice-packed, Georgia Dock preliminary weighted average, wholesale

Unit: Russian Ruble per Kilogram



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

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Poultry, especially chicken, is a globally traded protein valued for its relatively low feed conversion cost, short production cycle, and broad consumer acceptance across income levels and cuisines. On commodity markets, chicken is often referenced through spot or wholesale prices for whole birds or specific cuts, with the Georgia docks whole bird spot price in U.S. dollars per kilogram serving as a widely cited benchmark in U.S. market commentary. Prices are commonly expressed per kilogram or per pound, depending on the reporting source and contract convention.

Chicken is used primarily as a food protein in fresh, frozen, and processed forms. It is consumed as whole birds, breasts, thighs, wings, and mechanically separated meat, and it also enters prepared foods, deli products, and foodservice menus. Because chicken is raised in integrated production systems, market pricing reflects the interaction of feed costs, hatchery supply, grow-out capacity, processing throughput, and cold-chain logistics. Compared with beef and pork, chicken production is generally faster and more adaptable, which makes it a key substitute protein when consumers shift among meats based on price, availability, and dietary preference.

Supply Drivers

Chicken supply is shaped by biological production cycles, feed availability, and processing infrastructure. Broiler production depends on breeder flocks, hatcheries, feed mills, grow-out houses, and slaughter plants, so bottlenecks at any stage can affect marketable supply. The production cycle is short relative to other meats, but it still requires several weeks from hatch to slaughter, which limits immediate responsiveness to demand changes. This lag creates a recurring mismatch between near-term market signals and physical output.

Feed is the dominant input cost, especially corn and soybean meal, so grain prices strongly influence poultry economics. Regions with abundant feed grains and integrated logistics, such as the United States, Brazil, and parts of Europe and Asia, tend to support large-scale production. Poultry is also sensitive to animal disease, particularly avian influenza and other flock health issues, which can reduce supply through culling, movement restrictions, or trade barriers. Climate affects housing costs, bird stress, and mortality, while transport and refrigeration infrastructure determine how efficiently birds and cuts move from farm to processor to market. Because chickens are raised in controlled environments, supply is less exposed to weather than field crops, but it remains vulnerable to energy costs, labor availability, and biosecurity practices.

Demand Drivers

Demand for chicken is driven by its role as an affordable, versatile protein for households, restaurants, and food manufacturers. It is widely substituted for beef, pork, and fish when consumers seek lower-cost animal protein or leaner menu options. Demand is also shaped by cut preferences: breasts, wings, thighs, and whole birds can move differently because they serve distinct culinary and foodservice uses. This cut segmentation means that the market for whole birds does not always move in lockstep with the market for parts.

Consumption patterns often reflect household budgets, cultural cuisine, and seasonal grilling or holiday demand. Chicken is used in fresh retail, frozen products, ready-to-cook items, and processed foods, so demand is linked both to consumer shopping behavior and to industrial food manufacturing. Compared with some other meats, chicken demand tends to be relatively income-sensitive because it is often chosen as a value protein, though it also benefits from broad acceptance across many diets. Health perceptions, convenience, and the growth of prepared foods support structural demand, while substitution toward pork, beef, eggs, or plant-based proteins can occur when relative prices or preferences change. International trade also matters because different markets favor different cuts, allowing exporters to balance whole-bird and parts demand across regions.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Chicken prices are influenced by broad macroeconomic conditions through feed costs, consumer purchasing power, and currency movements. Because corn and soybean meal are key inputs, grain price changes transmit quickly into poultry margins and wholesale pricing. A stronger U.S. dollar can affect export competitiveness and the local value of internationally traded cuts, while a weaker dollar can support foreign demand for U.S.-priced poultry. Interest rates matter indirectly through working capital, inventory financing, and capital spending on housing and processing facilities.

Storage and refrigeration costs are important because chicken is perishable, so market structure often reflects short-term supply-demand balancing rather than long-duration storage arbitrage. This limits the role of classic commodity carry compared with storable grains or metals. Prices can also move with broader food inflation and with consumer substitution across proteins, especially when households adjust spending toward lower-cost meats. Correlation with other asset classes is usually indirect and mediated by macro conditions rather than by financial investment demand.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 2021140.72-
Apr 2021172.0022.23%
May 2021175.331.93%
Jun 2021172.76-1.46%
Jul 2021176.091.93%
Aug 2021175.13-0.55%
Sep 2021173.51-0.92%
Oct 2021166.32-4.15%
Nov 2021169.161.71%
Dec 2021202.0519.45%
Jan 2022104.30-48.38%
Feb 2022113.228.56%
Mar 2022181.0659.91%
Apr 2022144.72-20.07%
May 2022120.13-16.99%
Jun 2022105.03-12.57%
Jul 2022100.98-3.86%
Aug 2022111.1110.03%
Sep 2022104.37-6.06%
Oct 2022100.04-4.15%
Nov 202293.62-6.42%
Dec 2022101.057.94%
Jan 2023106.285.18%
Feb 2023111.554.96%
Mar 2023115.683.70%
Apr 2023127.4510.17%
May 2023122.06-4.23%
Jun 2023123.250.97%
Jul 2023124.330.88%
Aug 2023135.609.06%
Sep 2023148.859.78%
Oct 2023152.752.62%
Nov 2023151.19-1.02%
Dec 2023148.13-2.02%
Jan 2024139.42-5.88%
Feb 2024139.13-0.21%
Mar 2024140.440.94%
Apr 2024133.86-4.69%
May 2024136.942.30%
Jun 2024122.97-10.20%
Jul 2024116.25-5.47%
Aug 2024123.236.01%
Sep 2024132.747.71%
Oct 2024142.537.38%
Nov 2024152.527.01%
Dec 2024146.14-4.18%
Jan 2025154.025.39%
Feb 2025150.46-2.31%
Mar 2025140.00-6.95%
Apr 2025144.783.41%
May 2025142.87-1.32%
Jun 2025140.03-1.99%

Top Companies

Pilgrim's Pride Corp.
Website: http://www.pilgrimspride.com/
Location: Pittsburg, Texas, US
Estimated Production: 9 billion pounds per year

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