Maize (corn) Monthly Price - Malaysian Ringgit per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2016 - Mar 2026: 190.542 (29.32%)
Chart

Description: Maize (US), no. 2, yellow, f.o.b. US Gulf ports

Unit: Malaysian Ringgit per Metric Ton



Source: US Department of Agriculture; World Bank.

See also: Maize (corn) production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Maize, also called corn, is a staple cereal grain used both as a food crop and as an industrial feedstock. On commodity markets it is typically priced as yellow No. 2 maize, a grade that reflects standardized quality for bulk trade. A common reference point is FOB Gulf of Mexico, quoted in US dollars per metric ton, which reflects export pricing from a major shipping corridor. Maize is traded in physical and derivative markets because it is widely used in animal feed, starch and sweetener production, ethanol manufacture, and food processing. It is also an important source of calories in many diets, especially in parts of the Americas, Africa, and Asia. Because maize is harvested annually and stored in large volumes, its market price reflects both the current crop and carryover stocks. The grain’s broad industrial use links it to livestock, energy, and food markets, making it one of the most closely followed agricultural commodities.

Supply Drivers

Maize supply is shaped by a combination of climate, agronomy, and logistics. The crop is grown across temperate and subtropical regions, with the United States, Brazil, Argentina, China, and parts of Eastern Europe and Southern Africa playing enduring roles in global output and trade. Yield depends heavily on rainfall, temperature, and the timing of heat during pollination and grain fill, so weather in key growing regions strongly affects available supply. Maize is also sensitive to soil moisture, fertilizer availability, and planting conditions, which influence acreage decisions and final yields.

Production is constrained by the annual crop cycle: planting, pollination, harvest, drying, and storage all create seasonal supply patterns. Unlike mined commodities, output cannot be increased quickly once the crop is in the ground. Transport infrastructure matters as well, especially inland rail, river, and port capacity in exporting regions. Storage losses, pest pressure, and fungal contamination can reduce marketable supply, while disease and insect outbreaks can affect local yields. Because maize is bulky and relatively low in value per unit weight, freight costs and export bottlenecks play an important role in regional price differences.

Demand Drivers

Maize demand comes from three broad uses: animal feed, industrial processing, and direct food consumption. Feed demand is the largest structural driver in many markets because maize is a dense source of energy for poultry, hogs, and cattle rations. Its use in feed links maize prices to livestock production, meat consumption, and the relative cost of substitute feed grains such as wheat and barley. In industrial markets, maize is processed into starch, glucose, dextrose, and ethanol, creating demand from food manufacturing, beverage production, and fuel blending. In food systems, maize is consumed as whole grain, meal, flour, and traditional foods, especially where it is a dietary staple.

Demand is influenced by population growth, urbanization, and income changes that alter meat and processed-food consumption. Seasonal patterns also matter: feed use tends to be steady, while industrial demand can vary with processing schedules and ethanol economics. Substitution is important on both the demand and supply sides, since users can shift between maize and other grains depending on relative prices and quality requirements. Regulatory and technological factors, such as fuel blending mandates and advances in feed efficiency, shape long-run demand without eliminating maize’s central role in food and feed systems.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Maize prices are sensitive to the US dollar because the grain is widely traded in dollar-denominated export markets. A stronger dollar can make US-origin maize less competitive for foreign buyers, while a weaker dollar can support export demand. Interest rates matter because maize is storable: financing costs affect the economics of holding inventories, which in turn influence the futures curve and the balance between nearby and deferred contracts. When storage is abundant, markets can move into contango; when supplies are tight, nearby prices can strengthen relative to later delivery months.

Maize also responds to broader risk sentiment through its links to energy, livestock, and freight markets. Energy prices affect fertilizer, drying, and transport costs, while ethanol demand ties maize to the fuel complex. Because it is an agricultural commodity with a physical storage cost, maize is less a pure financial hedge than a crop market driven by harvest timing, carry, and logistics.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 2016649.90-
Apr 2016641.93-1.23%
May 2016683.476.47%
Jun 2016735.727.64%
Jul 2016650.60-11.57%
Aug 2016604.64-7.06%
Sep 2016609.830.86%
Oct 2016636.114.31%
Nov 2016656.073.14%
Dec 2016680.153.67%
Jan 2017713.934.97%
Feb 2017723.941.40%
Mar 2017705.71-2.52%
Apr 2017689.47-2.30%
May 2017684.48-0.72%
Jun 2017675.23-1.35%
Jul 2017675.730.07%
Aug 2017636.22-5.85%
Sep 2017619.92-2.56%
Oct 2017628.461.38%
Nov 2017621.30-1.14%
Dec 2017607.54-2.22%
Jan 2018616.781.52%
Feb 2018639.353.66%
Mar 2018671.164.98%
Apr 2018682.421.68%
May 2018709.814.01%
Jun 2018660.26-6.98%
Jul 2018633.57-4.04%
Aug 2018664.364.86%
Sep 2018640.96-3.52%
Oct 2018666.473.98%
Nov 2018672.630.92%
Dec 2018699.123.94%
Jan 2019686.31-1.83%
Feb 2019690.680.64%
Mar 2019678.02-1.83%
Apr 2019664.38-2.01%
May 2019713.417.38%
Jun 2019811.8613.80%
Jul 2019781.03-3.80%
Aug 2019685.13-12.28%
Sep 2019658.21-3.93%
Oct 2019700.166.37%
Nov 2019691.52-1.23%
Dec 2019693.180.24%
Jan 2020701.031.13%
Feb 2020702.630.23%
Mar 2020697.82-0.68%
Apr 2020639.84-8.31%
May 2020625.18-2.29%
Jun 2020632.721.21%
Jul 2020650.432.80%
Aug 2020625.83-3.78%
Sep 2020689.3910.16%
Oct 2020775.6512.51%
Nov 2020783.911.06%
Dec 2020807.593.02%
Jan 2021946.5617.21%
Feb 2021992.244.83%
Mar 20211,007.521.54%
Apr 20211,106.229.80%
May 20211,259.8013.88%
Jun 20211,209.67-3.98%
Jul 20211,169.02-3.36%
Aug 20211,083.16-7.35%
Sep 2021982.56-9.29%
Oct 2021997.491.52%
Nov 20211,038.264.09%
Dec 20211,116.227.51%
Jan 20221,158.783.81%
Feb 20221,225.435.75%
Mar 20221,409.5515.02%
Apr 20221,485.515.39%
May 20221,512.201.80%
Jun 20221,477.67-2.28%
Jul 20221,434.58-2.92%
Aug 20221,294.39-9.77%
Sep 20221,421.809.84%
Oct 20221,612.4413.41%
Nov 20221,488.25-7.70%
Dec 20221,333.70-10.38%
Jan 20231,311.02-1.70%
Feb 20231,304.63-0.49%
Mar 20231,262.33-3.24%
Apr 20231,287.491.99%
May 20231,214.76-5.65%
Jun 20231,237.171.85%
Jul 20231,112.14-10.11%
Aug 2023956.67-13.98%
Sep 20231,047.439.49%
Oct 20231,095.184.56%
Nov 2023990.48-9.56%
Dec 2023964.59-2.61%
Jan 2024930.46-3.54%
Feb 2024902.48-3.01%
Mar 2024898.59-0.43%
Apr 2024913.621.67%
May 2024933.082.13%
Jun 2024906.71-2.83%
Jul 2024829.77-8.49%
Aug 2024752.38-9.33%
Sep 2024787.014.60%
Oct 2024817.603.89%
Nov 2024893.499.28%
Dec 2024902.771.04%
Jan 2025958.796.20%
Feb 2025981.272.34%
Mar 2025920.04-6.24%
Apr 2025949.393.19%
May 2025869.82-8.38%
Jun 2025831.73-4.38%
Jul 2025850.272.23%
Aug 2025783.99-7.79%
Sep 2025831.486.06%
Oct 2025835.230.45%
Nov 2025840.150.59%
Dec 2025841.700.19%
Jan 2026829.93-1.40%
Feb 2026820.66-1.12%
Mar 2026840.442.41%

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