Groundnuts (peanuts) Monthly Price - Swedish Krona per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Mar 2026: -2,223.970 (-16.04%)
Chart

Description: Groundnuts (US), Runners 40/50, shelled basis, c.i.f. Rotterdam

Unit: Swedish Krona 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

Groundnuts, also called peanuts, are an oilseed and food crop traded in shelled, unshelled, and processed forms, with commodity-market references usually centered on raw kernels or standardized export grades priced in US dollars per metric ton. In international trade, pricing often reflects quality attributes such as kernel size, moisture content, aflatoxin risk, and whether the product is intended for confectionery, crushing, or direct food use. Groundnuts are used both as a human food and as an industrial input: they are consumed roasted, salted, or processed into peanut butter and snacks, and they are also crushed for edible oil and protein meal. Because the crop contains both oil and protein, it sits between the vegetable oils complex and the protein meal complex. Its market behavior is shaped by the fact that a large share of production is consumed domestically in producing countries, while export trade is concentrated in standardized grades that meet food-safety and quality requirements.

Supply Drivers

Groundnut supply is shaped by warm growing conditions, well-drained soils, and a crop cycle that depends on seasonal planting and harvest. The crop is especially sensitive to rainfall timing, because flowering, pegging, and pod development require adequate moisture but also dry conditions near harvest to reduce mold and spoilage. Drought, excessive rain, and high humidity can all reduce yields or quality. Because pods develop underground, harvesting and drying are labor-intensive and vulnerable to losses if timing is poor. Aflatoxin contamination is a persistent supply constraint in humid regions, since fungal infection can make lots unsuitable for food markets even when physical yields are adequate.

Production is concentrated in South Asia, West Africa, China, and parts of the Americas, where the crop fits rain-fed farming systems and mixed crop rotations. In many producing areas, groundnuts compete with other legumes, cereals, and oilseeds for land and labor. Supply also depends on shelling, storage, and transport infrastructure, because post-harvest handling strongly affects grade and exportability. As with other annual crops, output responds to planting decisions made before harvest, so supply adjusts with a lag to price signals. Seed quality, pest pressure, and access to irrigation or drying facilities are persistent determinants of marketable supply.

Demand Drivers

Demand for groundnuts comes from three broad channels: direct food consumption, crushing for oil, and use of the residual meal in feed or food ingredients. In many countries, groundnuts are an important protein and calorie source in household diets, especially where animal protein is expensive or less available. Food demand is relatively stable because peanuts are used in snacks, confectionery, sauces, and spreads, while industrial demand depends more on the relative economics of competing vegetable oils and protein meals. Groundnut oil competes with soybean, palm, sunflower, and rapeseed oils in edible-oil markets, though its higher value and distinct flavor often keep it in premium food uses rather than bulk industrial channels.

Demand is also shaped by quality preferences. Confectionery and snack markets require large kernels, uniform size, and low contamination, which supports price differentiation by grade. In some regions, seasonal consumption rises around festivals and holidays, while in others demand is linked to snack and bakery manufacturing. Income growth tends to support higher consumption of processed peanut products, but basic food demand is less sensitive than discretionary snack demand. Substitution with other nuts, legumes, and vegetable oils is important when relative prices change, especially in crushing and food-processing channels.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Groundnut prices are influenced by broad agricultural commodity cycles, freight costs, and the value of the US dollar, since international contracts are commonly denominated in dollars. A stronger dollar can make dollar-priced exports less competitive for non-dollar buyers, while a weaker dollar can support import demand. Because the crop is storable after drying and shelling, inventory holding costs matter, and prices can reflect seasonal patterns between harvest and the lean period before new-crop arrivals. Quality risk and storage losses also affect nearby versus deferred pricing.

Interest rates matter indirectly through financing costs for inventories, trade credit, and processing margins. Groundnuts are less financialized than some major grains or oilseeds, so price formation is driven more by physical supply, quality, and logistics than by speculative positioning. Correlation with other agricultural markets often arises through substitution in edible oils and protein meals, as well as through shared weather shocks across competing crops.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 202113,862.78-
Apr 202112,106.09-12.67%
May 202112,116.500.09%
Jun 202112,165.980.41%
Jul 202112,576.403.37%
Aug 202112,526.50-0.40%
Sep 202112,766.301.91%
Oct 202113,345.574.54%
Nov 202113,611.191.99%
Dec 202113,410.31-1.48%
Jan 202213,530.540.90%
Feb 202213,898.292.72%
Mar 202214,274.002.70%
Apr 202213,774.07-3.50%
May 202214,736.596.99%
Jun 202216,100.079.25%
Jul 202216,823.484.49%
Aug 202216,862.380.23%
Sep 202217,865.945.95%
Oct 202218,017.360.85%
Nov 202217,534.67-2.68%
Dec 202217,301.91-1.33%
Jan 202317,429.090.74%
Feb 202318,265.294.80%
Mar 202318,339.370.41%
Apr 202317,958.19-2.08%
May 202318,492.952.98%
Jun 202319,905.867.64%
Jul 202320,569.283.33%
Aug 202321,624.545.13%
Sep 202322,729.235.11%
Oct 202322,597.76-0.58%
Nov 202322,013.31-2.59%
Dec 202321,189.48-3.74%
Jan 202421,278.010.42%
Feb 202421,104.12-0.82%
Mar 202420,277.77-3.92%
Apr 202419,986.54-1.44%
May 202419,327.80-3.30%
Jun 202419,018.71-1.60%
Jul 202419,592.143.02%
Aug 202417,589.11-10.22%
Sep 202415,604.27-11.28%
Oct 202416,460.405.49%
Nov 202418,542.6612.65%
Dec 202418,643.690.54%
Jan 202518,708.800.35%
Feb 202517,838.10-4.65%
Mar 202515,732.63-11.80%
Apr 202513,460.15-14.44%
May 202512,678.41-5.81%
Jun 202512,412.11-2.10%
Jul 202511,990.30-3.40%
Aug 202511,978.91-0.10%
Sep 202511,576.44-3.36%
Oct 202511,313.94-2.27%
Nov 202511,418.330.92%
Dec 202511,177.59-2.11%
Jan 202611,094.58-0.74%
Feb 202611,116.120.19%
Mar 202611,638.814.70%

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