Copra Monthly Price - Canadian Dollar per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2001 - Jan 2021: 926.855 (309.41%)
Chart

Description: Copra (Philippines/Indonesia), bulk, c.i.f. N.W. Europe

Unit: Canadian Dollar per Metric Ton



Source: ISTA Mielke GmbH, Oil World; US Department of Agriculture; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Copra is the dried kernel of the coconut, produced by splitting mature coconuts and removing moisture so that the flesh can be pressed for oil. In commodity markets, it is typically priced per metric ton, with quotations often reflecting standard export grades and moisture content. Copra is a traditional oilseed raw material rather than a consumer food in bulk trade, and its market value is closely linked to the value of coconut oil and, indirectly, to other vegetable oils. The main commercial uses are crushing into coconut oil and production of coconut meal or cake, which is used in animal feed in some markets. Coconut oil derived from copra is also used in food processing, soaps, detergents, cosmetics, and industrial applications. Because copra is a processed agricultural product, its pricing depends not only on coconut harvests but also on drying quality, storage conditions, and transport from tropical producing areas to crushing and export centers.

Supply Drivers

Copra supply is shaped by the biology of the coconut palm, which grows in humid tropical climates and requires long maturation periods before bearing fruit. Production is concentrated in tropical coastal and island regions of South and Southeast Asia, the Pacific, and parts of East Africa and Latin America, where rainfall, temperature, and soil conditions support coconut cultivation. Output depends on the age profile of palm stands, because coconut trees are perennial and replacement takes many years. This creates slow adjustment to price signals compared with annual crops. Weather is a persistent supply factor: drought, excessive rainfall, cyclones, and saltwater intrusion can reduce nut set, harvest quality, and drying efficiency. Pests and diseases also matter because they can damage palms over long periods and reduce yields.

Copra is highly sensitive to post-harvest handling. Drying methods, humidity, and storage conditions affect oil content, mold risk, and quality discounts. Transport bottlenecks are common in dispersed island production areas, where collection from smallholders and shipment to crushers or ports adds cost. Because copra is bulky and relatively low in value per unit weight, freight and logistics materially influence export competitiveness. Supply is also tied to competing uses for coconuts, including fresh consumption and desiccated coconut processing, which can divert nuts away from copra production.

Demand Drivers

Demand for copra is driven primarily by the crushing industry, which converts it into coconut oil and coconut meal. Coconut oil is used in food manufacturing, confectionery, frying applications in some markets, and non-food uses such as soaps, surfactants, and personal-care products. Coconut meal or cake is a byproduct used in livestock feed, although its use depends on local feed formulations and relative prices of other protein meals. Because copra is an input rather than a final consumer good, its demand is derived from downstream demand for coconut oil and meal.

Substitution is important. Coconut oil competes with palm oil, soybean oil, rapeseed oil, and other vegetable oils in food and industrial applications, so relative prices among oils influence crushing demand for copra. In soap and detergent manufacturing, coconut oil is valued for its lauric acid content, which gives it functional properties not fully matched by many other oils. Consumer demand for coconut-based foods and ingredients also supports the market, especially in regions where coconut products are traditional. Seasonal patterns can appear in harvesting and shipping, but end-use demand is more persistent than seasonal. Income growth can raise demand for processed foods, cosmetics, and packaged consumer goods that use coconut derivatives, while health and labeling preferences can shift product formulations over long periods.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Copra prices are influenced by the value of the U.S. dollar because the commodity is commonly quoted in dollars while production costs are incurred in local currencies. Exchange-rate changes can alter export competitiveness and producer margins. As with other storable agricultural commodities, financing costs matter: higher interest rates raise the cost of holding inventories, which can affect the relationship between nearby and deferred prices. Storage conditions are also important because copra can deteriorate if moisture is not controlled, so quality risk limits long-term warehousing and can steepen nearby price sensitivity.

Copra often moves with broader vegetable-oil markets because crushers and buyers compare feedstock economics across oils. It can also show sensitivity to freight costs, since tropical origin-to-port logistics are a meaningful part of delivered value. Inflation affects nominal prices through input costs such as labor, fuel, packaging, and transport, but the main price mechanism remains the balance between coconut oil demand and the availability of dried coconut kernel.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 2001299.55-
May 2001292.74-2.27%
Jun 2001312.716.82%
Jul 2001354.2813.29%
Aug 2001367.763.80%
Sep 2001334.33-9.09%
Oct 2001315.54-5.62%
Nov 2001340.637.95%
Dec 2001326.91-4.03%
Jan 2002347.186.20%
Feb 2002366.735.63%
Mar 2002351.49-4.15%
Apr 2002396.2712.74%
May 2002403.021.70%
Jun 2002419.043.97%
Jul 2002426.011.66%
Aug 2002429.850.90%
Sep 2002393.88-8.37%
Oct 2002416.745.80%
Nov 2002445.686.95%
Dec 2002464.344.19%
Jan 2003462.48-0.40%
Feb 2003445.92-3.58%
Mar 2003397.46-10.87%
Apr 2003379.64-4.48%
May 2003372.01-2.01%
Jun 2003384.693.41%
Jul 2003375.75-2.33%
Aug 2003365.78-2.65%
Sep 2003356.20-2.62%
Oct 2003374.035.01%
Nov 2003418.9012.00%
Dec 2003500.3119.43%
Jan 2004479.08-4.24%
Feb 2004525.449.68%
Mar 2004569.878.45%
Apr 2004642.2412.70%
May 2004654.331.88%
Jun 2004550.86-15.81%
Jul 2004556.100.95%
Aug 2004527.57-5.13%
Sep 2004538.362.05%
Oct 2004508.32-5.58%
Nov 2004495.20-2.58%
Dec 2004497.990.56%
Jan 2005494.37-0.73%
Feb 2005516.784.53%
Mar 2005543.545.18%
Apr 2005529.42-2.60%
May 2005508.81-3.89%
Jun 2005497.71-2.18%
Jul 2005462.27-7.12%
Aug 2005409.47-11.42%
Sep 2005410.590.27%
Oct 2005430.314.80%
Nov 2005428.33-0.46%
Dec 2005399.05-6.84%
Jan 2006409.612.65%
Feb 2006424.293.58%
Mar 2006414.15-2.39%
Apr 2006410.60-0.86%
May 2006401.51-2.21%
Jun 2006397.78-0.93%
Jul 2006411.703.50%
Aug 2006422.112.53%
Sep 2006424.380.54%
Oct 2006441.774.10%
Nov 2006466.045.49%
Dec 2006526.1912.91%
Jan 2007540.542.73%
Feb 2007559.343.48%
Mar 2007563.270.70%
Apr 2007586.954.20%
May 2007618.475.37%
Jun 2007655.355.96%
Jul 2007612.69-6.51%
Aug 2007605.73-1.14%
Sep 2007598.86-1.13%
Oct 2007619.563.46%
Nov 2007687.9411.04%
Dec 2007734.326.74%
Jan 2008817.2611.30%
Feb 2008873.386.87%
Mar 2008934.286.97%
Apr 2008923.03-1.20%
May 2008948.112.72%
Jun 2008996.545.11%
Jul 2008920.32-7.65%
Aug 2008799.91-13.08%
Sep 2008737.10-7.85%
Oct 2008648.01-12.09%
Nov 2008547.17-15.56%
Dec 2008570.084.19%
Jan 2009560.74-1.64%
Feb 2009521.88-6.93%
Mar 2009493.82-5.38%
Apr 2009572.9116.02%
May 2009610.776.61%
Jun 2009531.10-13.04%
Jul 2009480.84-9.46%
Aug 2009509.305.92%
Sep 2009476.65-6.41%
Oct 2009465.89-2.26%
Nov 2009483.913.87%
Dec 2009504.104.17%
Jan 2010512.501.67%
Feb 2010529.413.30%
Mar 2010589.9111.43%
Apr 2010595.670.98%
May 2010608.462.15%
Jun 2010647.986.49%
Jul 2010678.694.74%
Aug 2010768.4013.22%
Sep 2010825.817.47%
Oct 2010906.469.77%
Nov 2010965.766.54%
Dec 20101,101.2614.03%
Jan 20111,278.9016.13%
Feb 20111,402.629.67%
Mar 20111,201.12-14.37%
Apr 20111,281.106.66%
May 20111,292.750.91%
Jun 20111,125.39-12.95%
Jul 20111,006.06-10.60%
Aug 2011902.79-10.26%
Sep 2011827.05-8.39%
Oct 2011775.93-6.18%
Nov 2011954.1122.96%
Dec 2011939.91-1.49%
Jan 2012932.93-0.74%
Feb 2012888.31-4.78%
Mar 2012838.44-5.61%
Apr 2012846.240.93%
May 2012731.35-13.58%
Jun 2012685.19-6.31%
Jul 2012681.77-0.50%
Aug 2012624.17-8.45%
Sep 2012592.34-5.10%
Oct 2012562.46-5.04%
Nov 2012528.97-5.95%
Dec 2012483.80-8.54%
Jan 2013516.266.71%
Feb 2013542.465.08%
Mar 2013527.44-2.77%
Apr 2013506.98-3.88%
May 2013528.374.22%
Jun 2013579.339.64%
Jul 2013563.52-2.73%
Aug 2013582.203.31%
Sep 2013638.179.61%
Oct 2013641.810.57%
Nov 2013841.2231.07%
Dec 2013853.511.46%
Jan 2014876.812.73%
Feb 2014950.598.41%
Mar 2014975.892.66%
Apr 2014937.89-3.89%
May 2014961.362.50%
Jun 2014939.38-2.29%
Jul 2014850.08-9.51%
Aug 2014826.99-2.72%
Sep 2014819.97-0.85%
Oct 2014809.94-1.22%
Nov 2014849.694.91%
Dec 2014873.882.85%
Jan 2015887.201.52%
Feb 2015938.385.77%
Mar 2015872.39-7.03%
Apr 2015834.82-4.31%
May 2015867.813.95%
Jun 2015878.171.19%
Jul 2015888.361.16%
Aug 2015853.56-3.92%
Sep 2015866.191.48%
Oct 2015878.571.43%
Nov 2015878.45-0.01%
Dec 2015940.247.03%
Jan 2016975.223.72%
Feb 2016976.530.13%
Mar 20161,025.895.05%
Apr 20161,056.232.96%
May 20161,006.91-4.67%
Jun 20161,030.242.32%
Jul 20161,041.201.06%
Aug 20161,054.081.24%
Sep 20161,064.651.00%
Oct 20161,040.73-2.25%
Nov 20161,090.914.82%
Dec 20161,144.904.95%
Jan 20171,178.232.91%
Feb 20171,129.94-4.10%
Mar 20171,075.43-4.82%
Apr 20171,096.351.94%
May 20171,125.222.63%
Jun 20171,131.920.60%
Jul 20171,042.37-7.91%
Aug 20171,029.79-1.21%
Sep 2017989.75-3.89%
Oct 2017995.080.54%
Nov 20171,035.714.08%
Dec 2017999.81-3.47%
Jan 2018951.34-4.85%
Feb 2018901.71-5.22%
Mar 2018874.81-2.98%
Apr 2018867.24-0.87%
May 2018833.09-3.94%
Jun 2018810.26-2.74%
Jul 2018802.90-0.91%
Aug 2018799.72-0.40%
Sep 2018738.49-7.66%
Oct 2018682.21-7.62%
Nov 2018630.44-7.59%
Dec 2018676.367.28%
Jan 2019655.40-3.10%
Feb 2019594.90-9.23%
Mar 2019572.62-3.74%
Apr 2019567.20-0.95%
May 2019564.98-0.39%
Jun 2019533.16-5.63%
Jul 2019550.863.32%
Aug 2019599.438.82%
Sep 2019602.340.49%
Oct 2019595.62-1.12%
Nov 2019681.7014.45%
Dec 2019806.5818.32%
Jan 2020789.01-2.18%
Feb 2020709.82-10.04%
Mar 2020736.123.70%
Apr 2020743.641.02%
May 2020724.61-2.56%
Jun 2020780.857.76%
Jul 2020758.91-2.81%
Aug 2020813.967.25%
Sep 2020859.525.60%
Oct 2020920.637.11%
Nov 20201,111.0220.68%
Dec 20201,132.931.97%
Jan 20211,226.418.25%

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