Peanut Oil Monthly Price - Malaysian Ringgit per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2025 - Mar 2026: -756.475 (-10.18%)
Chart

Description: Groundnut oil (any origin), c.i.f. Rotterdam

Unit: Malaysian Ringgit per Metric Ton



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

See also: Peanut Oil production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Peanut oil, also called groundnut oil, is a vegetable oil pressed or solvent-extracted from peanuts and traded internationally as a food oil and industrial input. On commodity markets it is commonly quoted as groundnut oil, any origin, CIF Rotterdam, in US dollars per metric ton. That benchmark reflects delivered cargoes into a major European trading hub and is used as a reference for cross-border pricing rather than a single standardized contract. Peanut oil is valued for its mild flavor, relatively high oxidative stability, and suitability for frying, salad oils, processed foods, and some specialty culinary uses. It is also used in cosmetics, soaps, and certain industrial formulations. Because peanuts are an oilseed and a food crop, the oil market is linked to both edible-oil demand and the economics of peanut crushing, with the protein meal co-product influencing the overall crush margin.

Supply Drivers

Supply is shaped by peanut cultivation, which depends on warm growing seasons, well-drained soils, and a frost-free period long enough for pod development. Major producing regions include South Asia, China, the United States, West Africa, and parts of South America, where climate and agronomy support the crop. Unlike perennial tree crops, peanuts are planted annually, so acreage can shift with relative prices, input costs, and competing crops. Yields are sensitive to rainfall timing, heat stress, and disease pressure, especially fungal diseases and aflatoxin contamination, which can limit food use and divert material into lower-value channels. Because peanuts grow underground, harvesting and drying require careful handling, and post-harvest losses can be significant where storage and shelling infrastructure are weak.

Crushing economics also matter. Peanut oil supply depends on the availability of peanuts suitable for oil extraction after edible and confectionery demand is met. Transport bottlenecks, shelling capacity, and quality segregation affect export flows. In many producing areas, smallholder production and fragmented logistics create seasonal supply patterns, while larger commercial systems provide more consistent exportable volumes.

Demand Drivers

Demand for peanut oil is driven primarily by food use. It is prized in frying, sautéing, and processed foods because it has a neutral to slightly nutty taste and performs well at high temperatures. In many cuisines it is a traditional cooking oil, so household and food-service demand can be relatively stable where culinary preferences are established. Industrial demand is smaller but includes cosmetics, personal care products, soaps, and specialty formulations that value its fatty-acid profile and oxidative stability.

Substitution is important. Peanut oil competes with soybean oil, sunflower oil, rapeseed oil, palm oil, and cottonseed oil in edible-oil markets. When peanut oil becomes expensive relative to these alternatives, food manufacturers and distributors often reformulate or switch blends, especially in mass-market applications where flavor is not essential. Conversely, in premium or traditional culinary uses, substitution is less complete. Demand also reflects income and urbanization, since processed foods and restaurant consumption tend to rise with household purchasing power. Because peanuts are both an oilseed and a snack/food crop, edible demand for whole peanuts can indirectly tighten or loosen oil availability by changing how much of the crop enters crushing.

Macro and Financial Drivers

As with other vegetable oils, peanut oil prices are influenced by the US dollar because international trade is commonly denominated in dollars. A stronger dollar can make dollar-priced cargoes more expensive for non-dollar buyers, while a weaker dollar can support import demand. Freight rates, port congestion, and storage costs matter because the benchmark is quoted on a delivered basis. Peanut oil can also exhibit inventory-related pricing patterns: when nearby supply is tight relative to prompt demand, nearby prices can strengthen versus deferred cargoes, while ample stocks and slow movement can widen carrying costs across the forward curve.

Broader macro conditions affect demand through food inflation, consumer spending, and industrial activity. Peanut oil is less of a financial asset than some commodities, but it still responds to general risk sentiment through trade finance, credit availability, and the cost of holding inventories. Its price also tends to move within the wider vegetable-oil complex, where substitution and blending link it to other edible oils.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 20257,432.65-
Apr 20257,414.24-0.25%
May 20257,197.03-2.93%
Jun 20257,200.580.05%
Jul 20257,649.756.24%
Aug 20257,035.89-8.02%
Sep 20256,781.21-3.62%
Oct 20256,864.301.23%
Nov 20256,979.081.67%
Dec 20256,632.95-4.96%
Jan 20266,991.245.40%
Feb 20267,047.030.80%
Mar 20266,676.18-5.26%

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