Rubber Monthly Price - Rand per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Dec 2017 - Jun 2025: 16.644 (76.14%)
Chart

Description: Rubber (Asia), RSS3 grade, Singapore Commodity Exchange Ltd (SICOM) nearby contract beginning 2004; during 2000 to 2003, Singapore RSS1; previously Malaysia RSS1

Unit: Rand per Kilogram



Source: Singapore Exchange Ltd (SGX previously SICOM); Bloomberg; Rubber Association of Singapore Commodity Exchange (RASCE); International Rubber Study Group; Asian Wall Street Journal; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Rubber in commodity markets usually refers to natural rubber, a plant-derived polymer harvested as latex from rubber trees and processed into standardized grades for trade. The most widely followed benchmark is RSS3, a ribbed smoked sheet grade quoted on the Singapore Commodity Exchange (SICOM) in US dollars per kilogram. Natural rubber is valued for its elasticity, tensile strength, and resistance to abrasion, which make it suitable for tires, conveyor belts, hoses, seals, footwear, and many industrial products. It is distinct from synthetic rubber, which is produced from petrochemical feedstocks, but the two are often close substitutes in many applications.

Prices are typically quoted by grade, delivery location, and contract month, with benchmark contracts used to hedge exposure to physical supply and manufacturing demand. Because rubber is an agricultural raw material, its market reflects both biological production constraints and industrial consumption patterns. The commodity is especially important to the tire industry, where performance requirements and cost considerations determine the balance between natural and synthetic rubber. Its pricing also reflects transport, processing, and quality differentials between producing regions and consuming centers.

Supply Drivers

Natural rubber supply is shaped by the biology of the rubber tree, which requires several years of growth before tapping begins and then produces latex over a long but finite productive life. This creates a lag between planting decisions and marketable output, so supply responds slowly to price signals. Production is concentrated in tropical regions with warm temperatures, high rainfall, and suitable soils, especially Southeast Asia, with additional output from parts of South Asia, West Africa, and Latin America. These regions are favored because the tree is sensitive to frost and performs best in humid equatorial climates.

Harvesting is labor-intensive because latex is collected by tapping the bark, so labor availability, wage costs, and plantation management practices matter. Weather affects both yield and tapping schedules: heavy rain can disrupt collection, while drought can reduce latex flow and tree health. Disease pressure, including fungal and leaf diseases, can also affect output because monoculture plantations are vulnerable to biological shocks. Processing and transport infrastructure matter as well, since latex and sheet rubber must be moved quickly to preserve quality. Supply is therefore shaped by a combination of climate, labor, plantation age structure, and the long replacement cycle of tree crops.

Demand Drivers

Demand for rubber is dominated by transportation and industrial uses, especially tires for passenger vehicles, trucks, buses, motorcycles, and aircraft. Tire manufacturing is the largest end use because rubber provides grip, durability, and heat resistance. Natural rubber is often blended with synthetic rubber, carbon black, and other additives, so demand depends on the relative performance and price of substitute materials. When synthetic rubber becomes cheaper, manufacturers can adjust formulations, but natural rubber remains important where resilience, tear strength, and fatigue resistance are required.

Consumption also reflects broader industrial activity because rubber is used in belts, seals, vibration dampers, gloves, footwear, and a wide range of molded goods. Vehicle production, freight movement, road transport intensity, and replacement tire demand are key structural drivers. Seasonal factors can matter in some regions because tire replacement and industrial output vary with weather and driving patterns, but the larger influence is the global vehicle fleet and the expansion of road-based transport. Income growth tends to support rubber demand indirectly through higher vehicle ownership, freight volumes, and manufactured goods output. Environmental and efficiency standards can alter tire composition, but they usually change the mix of materials rather than eliminating rubber demand.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Rubber prices are influenced by the US dollar because benchmark contracts are commonly quoted in dollars, so exchange-rate changes affect purchasing power for non-dollar buyers. The commodity also responds to broader industrial cycles, especially manufacturing activity and transportation demand. Because rubber is storable but subject to quality loss and warehousing costs, carry economics matter: when nearby supply is ample, deferred contracts can trade at a premium that reflects storage and financing costs; when physical availability tightens, nearby prices can strengthen relative to later delivery months.

Interest rates affect the cost of holding inventories and financing trade flows, while inflation can influence input costs such as labor, energy, and transport. Rubber often trades with other industrial commodities through shared exposure to manufacturing activity, though its agricultural supply base gives it a distinct seasonal and biological component. It is less of a financial hedge than precious metals or energy, but it can still reflect broad risk sentiment when investors adjust exposure to cyclical raw materials.

MonthPriceChange
Dec 201721.86-
Jan 201821.02-3.86%
Feb 201820.36-3.10%
Mar 201820.822.22%
Apr 201820.950.66%
May 201821.321.76%
Jun 201820.75-2.70%
Jul 201819.66-5.23%
Aug 201820.725.37%
Sep 201821.312.85%
Oct 201820.71-2.78%
Nov 201819.07-7.92%
Dec 201820.447.17%
Jan 201922.037.79%
Feb 201922.783.39%
Mar 201924.748.62%
Apr 201924.33-1.68%
May 201925.544.97%
Jun 201928.1210.09%
Jul 201923.42-16.71%
Aug 201922.73-2.91%
Sep 201922.24-2.18%
Oct 201921.33-4.11%
Nov 201922.806.90%
Dec 201924.035.41%
Jan 202024.200.71%
Feb 202024.11-0.35%
Mar 202024.893.23%
Apr 202024.46-1.73%
May 202024.480.07%
Jun 202023.98-2.05%
Jul 202024.813.46%
Aug 202029.2517.90%
Sep 202031.066.20%
Oct 202036.0315.97%
Nov 202035.81-0.59%
Dec 202035.07-2.07%
Jan 202134.77-0.87%
Feb 202134.76-0.02%
Mar 202135.542.23%
Apr 202130.97-12.85%
May 202132.264.17%
Jun 202129.51-8.54%
Jul 202127.25-7.63%
Aug 202128.163.33%
Sep 202126.07-7.41%
Oct 202127.766.49%
Nov 202129.887.61%
Dec 202130.431.85%
Jan 202230.530.34%
Feb 202232.135.23%
Mar 202231.80-1.04%
Apr 202231.44-1.12%
May 202232.734.10%
Jun 202232.05-2.09%
Jul 202229.98-6.44%
Aug 202226.89-10.33%
Sep 202225.92-3.61%
Oct 202227.194.89%
Nov 202225.13-7.55%
Dec 202226.686.15%
Jan 202327.864.43%
Feb 202328.984.01%
Mar 202328.90-0.26%
Apr 202327.99-3.15%
May 202329.696.07%
Jun 202328.76-3.16%
Jul 202327.03-6.00%
Aug 202327.572.01%
Sep 202329.436.73%
Oct 202330.654.15%
Nov 202330.890.77%
Dec 202331.060.55%
Jan 202433.848.96%
Feb 202438.3813.42%
Mar 202445.1017.51%
Apr 202443.04-4.57%
May 202439.61-7.97%
Jun 202441.695.26%
Jul 202437.61-9.79%
Aug 202443.1014.59%
Sep 202446.698.33%
Oct 202446.18-1.09%
Nov 202441.05-11.09%
Dec 202442.944.60%
Jan 202544.363.30%
Feb 202544.590.52%
Mar 202543.15-3.22%
Apr 202540.22-6.79%
May 202539.67-1.37%
Jun 202538.50-2.94%

Top Companies

Thai Rubber Latex Corporation
Website: http://www.thaitexgroup.com/
Location: Thailand
Estimated Production: 100000 tons per year

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