Soft Red Winter Wheat Monthly Price - New Israeli Sheqel per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Mar 2026: -131.727 (-14.60%)
Chart

Description: Wheat (US), no. 2, soft red winter, export price delivered at the US Gulf port for prompt or 30 days shipment

Unit: New Israeli Sheqel per Metric Ton



Source: 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

Soft Red Winter Wheat is a class of wheat grown primarily for milling into flour used in cakes, cookies, crackers, pastries, and some blended breads. On commodity markets, it is commonly priced as a milling wheat contract, with the Chicago soft red winter wheat futures contract serving as the standard benchmark in North American trade. Prices are typically quoted in U.S. dollars per metric ton or, in exchange-traded form, in bushels that can be converted to metric tons. The grain is valued for its relatively low protein content and soft endosperm, which produce flour with lower gluten strength than hard wheat classes. That makes it distinct from hard red winter wheat and hard red spring wheat, which are more suitable for bread flour. Soft red winter wheat is also used in feed rations when quality falls below milling standards, so its market links both food and feed demand. Its pricing reflects milling quality, protein content, moisture, test weight, and the availability of competing wheat classes and corn.

Supply Drivers

Soft red winter wheat supply is shaped by a winter-growing cycle, with planting in the autumn, dormancy through cold months, and harvest in late spring or early summer. This calendar exposes the crop to winterkill, freeze-thaw stress, excessive moisture, and spring disease pressure. The main producing areas are the eastern and central United States, where rainfall is generally more reliable than in drier wheat belts, but where humidity also increases fungal disease risk. Because the crop is harvested before many other grains, it often enters storage and transport channels ahead of the broader summer grain flow, making elevator capacity and rail or barge logistics important.

Yield depends heavily on soil moisture at planting and during spring growth, while excessive rain at harvest can reduce quality through sprouting and lower test weight. As a winter crop, it competes for acreage with other autumn-sown grains and with land uses that fit regional rotations. Production is also influenced by seed genetics, fertilizer costs, and the ability of farmers to manage disease with fungicides. Unlike perennial crops, wheat can be replanted each season, but acreage decisions respond to relative prices, input costs, and expected agronomic conditions. Because milling quality is sensitive to weather, supply is not only a matter of tonnage but also of grade distribution.

Demand Drivers

Demand for soft red winter wheat comes mainly from flour millers and food manufacturers that need low-protein wheat for soft-textured products. It is a key ingredient in cookies, crackers, cakes, pie crusts, and some noodles and blended breads. Millers often blend it with stronger wheats to achieve target flour characteristics, so its demand is partly derived from the broader wheat-milling complex. When soft red winter wheat is abundant or of lower quality, it can also move into livestock feed, linking its market to corn and feed barley prices.

Consumption is relatively stable because it is tied to staple food processing rather than discretionary spending, but the mix between food and feed use shifts with relative prices and crop quality. Seasonal demand patterns reflect milling and baking schedules, while export demand depends on the competitiveness of U.S. wheat against other origins in North Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Substitution among wheat classes is important: millers can adjust blends among soft red winter, hard red winter, hard red spring, and soft white wheat depending on protein needs and price spreads. Long-run demand is also shaped by population growth, urbanization, and the persistence of processed flour-based foods in diets.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Soft red winter wheat prices respond to broad grain-market conditions, especially the U.S. dollar, because wheat is traded internationally and a stronger dollar tends to reduce export competitiveness. Interest rates matter through storage and financing costs: grain held in inventory incurs carrying costs, which influence futures curves and the balance between nearby and deferred contracts. When inventories are ample, markets often exhibit contango; when nearby supply is tight relative to demand, backwardation can appear. Inflation can affect nominal grain prices through input costs such as fuel, fertilizer, and transport, although wheat also serves as a food staple whose price is sensitive to purchasing power. The contract often correlates with other agricultural markets, especially corn and soybeans, because acreage competition and feed substitution link their pricing.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 2021902.53-
Apr 2021922.012.16%
May 2021884.15-4.11%
Jun 2021857.02-3.07%
Jul 2021832.68-2.84%
Aug 2021890.136.90%
Sep 2021845.10-5.06%
Nov 20211,042.2223.33%
Dec 20211,028.77-1.29%
Jan 20221,019.64-0.89%
Feb 20221,090.696.97%
Mar 20221,449.0532.86%
Apr 20221,385.43-4.39%
May 20221,483.277.06%
Jun 20221,294.38-12.73%
Jul 20221,096.59-15.28%
Feb 20231,104.710.74%
Mar 20231,030.60-6.71%
Apr 20231,008.41-2.15%
May 2023953.49-5.45%
Jun 2023937.41-1.69%
Jul 2023915.39-2.35%
Aug 2023864.58-5.55%
Sep 2023880.891.89%
Oct 2023941.816.92%
Nov 2023920.11-2.30%
Dec 2023939.182.07%
Jan 2024920.65-1.97%
Feb 2024897.77-2.49%
Mar 2024828.93-7.67%
Apr 2024852.762.88%
May 2024938.5810.06%
Jun 2024859.07-8.47%
Jul 2024804.58-6.34%
Aug 2024767.88-4.56%
Sep 2024819.136.67%
Oct 2024876.637.02%
Nov 2024852.92-2.70%
Dec 2024829.99-2.69%
Jan 2025833.520.43%
Feb 2025868.594.21%
Mar 2025831.79-4.24%
Apr 2025811.08-2.49%
May 2025788.32-2.81%
Jun 2025756.79-4.00%
Jul 2025706.05-6.70%
Aug 2025680.34-3.64%
Sep 2025691.791.68%
Oct 2025687.14-0.67%
Nov 2025733.156.70%
Dec 2025717.52-2.13%
Jan 2026688.24-4.08%
Feb 2026720.834.73%
Mar 2026770.806.93%

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