Sorghum Monthly Price - Canadian Dollar per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2001 - Aug 2020: 103.881 (70.73%)
Chart

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

Unit: Canadian Dollar per Metric Ton



Source: US Department of Agriculture; World Bank.

See also: Sorghum production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Sorghum is a drought-tolerant cereal grain grown in semi-arid and temperate regions and used mainly for animal feed, food, and industrial processing. In commodity markets, it is typically priced as bulk grain on a per metric ton basis, with grades and delivery terms varying by origin and contract. Trade references often follow export quotations from major producing and exporting regions rather than a single global benchmark, because sorghum is less standardized and less liquid than wheat or corn. The grain is used in livestock rations, poultry feed, ethanol production, starch and sweetener processing, and in some regions as a staple food. Its value is closely linked to feed grain substitution, especially relative to corn and barley, and to the availability of competing grains in importing markets. Sorghum’s role in food systems is especially important in dryland agriculture, where its resilience to heat and limited rainfall makes it a practical crop where other cereals are less reliable.

Supply Drivers

Sorghum supply is shaped by climate, water availability, and the economics of dryland farming. It is widely grown in the United States, West Africa, India, Mexico, Argentina, and parts of Australia and eastern Africa, where rainfall uncertainty and high temperatures favor a crop with strong drought tolerance. Production is typically annual, so acreage decisions respond to relative prices of competing crops such as corn, wheat, and soybeans before planting. Because sorghum is often grown in marginal rainfall zones, yield variability is strongly influenced by precipitation timing, heat stress, and soil moisture during flowering and grain fill. Pest pressure, bird damage, and fungal diseases can also affect output, especially where storage and field protection are limited.

Supply is further constrained by transport and handling infrastructure. In export systems, sorghum competes with other feed grains for rail, port, and storage capacity, so inland logistics can influence delivered prices. In many producing areas, sorghum is part of mixed farming systems, and production decisions reflect rotation benefits, input costs, and access to seed and fertilizer. Since the crop is harvested once per season and cannot be rapidly expanded after planting, supply tends to adjust with a lag to price signals.

Demand Drivers

Demand for sorghum comes primarily from livestock feed, food consumption in producing regions, and industrial uses such as ethanol and starch processing. In feed rations, sorghum substitutes for corn and barley, with relative prices, local availability, and animal nutrition requirements determining its share. It is especially useful where feed grain imports are costly or where local production favors dryland cereals. Food demand is concentrated in parts of Africa and South Asia, where sorghum is milled into flour, porridge, flatbreads, and fermented foods. In these markets, demand is influenced by population growth, urbanization, and household income, although sorghum often remains important as a lower-cost staple.

Seasonality matters because harvest timing affects local supply and post-harvest storage flows. In some regions, sorghum is consumed directly after harvest, while in others it enters commercial channels for feed or processing. Demand also reflects substitution with maize, barley, and wheat in both food and feed systems. Where livestock industries expand, sorghum demand tends to rise with feed grain consumption, but its competitiveness depends on protein content, energy value, and processing characteristics. Industrial demand is linked to grain availability and the economics of converting starch into fuel or sweeteners.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Sorghum prices are influenced by broad grain-market conditions, especially the relative price of corn and other feed grains. Because sorghum is a close substitute in feed use, changes in grain spreads can redirect demand between crops. The U.S. dollar matters for export competitiveness: a stronger dollar tends to make U.S.-origin grain less attractive in foreign markets, while a weaker dollar supports export demand. Interest rates affect carrying costs for merchants and processors that store grain between harvest and consumption periods. When storage is abundant, futures markets can show contango as holders require compensation for financing and storage; tighter nearby supply can produce backwardation. Sorghum also responds to general movements in agricultural commodity sentiment, freight costs, and broader inflation in input and transport expenses.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 2001146.87-
May 2001146.19-0.46%
Jun 2001136.49-6.63%
Jul 2001144.575.92%
Aug 2001146.521.34%
Sep 2001148.361.26%
Oct 2001149.200.57%
Nov 2001150.881.13%
Dec 2001151.230.23%
Jan 2002152.700.97%
Feb 2002148.21-2.94%
Mar 2002145.47-1.85%
Apr 2002140.58-3.36%
May 2002139.22-0.97%
Jun 2002135.92-2.37%
Jul 2002155.8514.66%
Aug 2002178.4514.51%
Sep 2002184.393.33%
Oct 2002179.17-2.83%
Nov 2002180.790.90%
Dec 2002176.64-2.30%
Jan 2003170.71-3.36%
Feb 2003165.16-3.25%
Mar 2003157.61-4.57%
Apr 2003155.78-1.16%
May 2003145.32-6.72%
Jun 2003131.95-9.20%
Jul 2003124.02-6.01%
Aug 2003145.3217.18%
Sep 2003148.772.37%
Oct 2003143.12-3.80%
Nov 2003149.934.76%
Dec 2003153.342.27%
Jan 2004157.682.83%
Feb 2004167.706.35%
Mar 2004173.023.17%
Apr 2004173.380.21%
May 2004163.49-5.70%
Jun 2004157.10-3.91%
Jul 2004127.95-18.55%
Aug 2004135.315.75%
Sep 2004128.35-5.14%
Oct 2004116.50-9.24%
Nov 2004110.39-5.24%
Dec 2004110.36-0.03%
Jan 2005110.590.20%
Feb 2005114.353.40%
Mar 2005117.582.83%
Apr 2005115.07-2.13%
May 2005120.875.04%
Jun 2005120.25-0.51%
Jul 2005129.287.51%
Aug 2005120.46-6.82%
Sep 2005114.69-4.79%
Oct 2005114.64-0.05%
Nov 2005109.33-4.63%
Dec 2005112.092.53%
Jan 2006116.493.92%
Feb 2006121.844.59%
Mar 2006120.29-1.27%
Apr 2006124.903.83%
May 2006126.241.07%
Jun 2006124.56-1.33%
Jul 2006135.508.78%
Aug 2006127.97-5.55%
Sep 2006133.444.27%
Oct 2006156.0116.91%
Nov 2006189.7621.64%
Dec 2006196.643.62%
Jan 2007205.854.68%
Feb 2007211.472.73%
Mar 2007198.33-6.21%
Apr 2007169.46-14.56%
May 2007164.22-3.09%
Jun 2007164.910.42%
Jul 2007145.44-11.81%
Aug 2007159.119.40%
Sep 2007167.195.07%
Oct 2007159.15-4.81%
Nov 2007164.773.53%
Dec 2007187.7513.94%
Jan 2008215.3114.68%
Feb 2008218.301.39%
Mar 2008225.393.25%
Apr 2008243.628.09%
May 2008237.86-2.36%
Jun 2008266.5812.07%
Jul 2008221.60-16.87%
Aug 2008220.73-0.39%
Sep 2008228.603.57%
Oct 2008193.86-15.20%
Nov 2008183.62-5.28%
Dec 2008171.10-6.82%
Jan 2009187.949.84%
Feb 2009179.46-4.51%
Mar 2009175.25-2.35%
Apr 2009188.537.58%
May 2009184.24-2.28%
Jun 2009172.48-6.38%
Jul 2009149.95-13.06%
Aug 2009154.933.32%
Sep 2009153.49-0.93%
Oct 2009167.779.30%
Nov 2009175.904.84%
Dec 2009175.40-0.28%
Jan 2010168.74-3.80%
Feb 2010162.81-3.51%
Mar 2010158.26-2.80%
Apr 2010150.19-5.10%
May 2010153.182.00%
Jun 2010135.95-11.25%
Jul 2010138.051.55%
Aug 2010149.418.22%
Sep 2010191.0227.85%
Oct 2010204.657.14%
Nov 2010205.680.50%
Dec 2010223.448.64%
Jan 2011245.019.65%
Feb 2011249.962.02%
Mar 2011259.823.95%
Apr 2011277.536.82%
May 2011253.64-8.61%
Jun 2011254.380.29%
Jul 2011259.121.86%
Aug 2011297.2214.70%
Sep 2011289.64-2.55%
Oct 2011269.08-7.10%
Nov 2011271.740.99%
Dec 2011262.59-3.37%
Jan 2012269.132.49%
Feb 2012268.28-0.32%
Mar 2012272.351.52%
Apr 2012253.03-7.09%
May 2012261.393.31%
Jun 2012271.343.81%
Jul 2012272.350.37%
Aug 2012271.19-0.42%
Sep 2012272.080.33%
Oct 2012279.092.58%
Nov 2012288.223.27%
Dec 2012280.96-2.52%
Jan 2013288.602.72%
Feb 2013290.720.73%
Mar 2013304.104.60%
Apr 2013274.36-9.78%
May 2013278.851.64%
Jun 2013243.98-12.50%
Jul 2013228.59-6.31%
Aug 2013229.630.46%
Sep 2013224.42-2.27%
Oct 2013212.71-5.22%
Nov 2013204.62-3.81%
Dec 2013219.087.07%
Jan 2014229.964.96%
Feb 2014244.436.29%
Mar 2014260.466.56%
Apr 2014255.40-1.94%
May 2014240.45-5.86%
Jun 2014222.17-7.60%
Jul 2014207.37-6.66%
Aug 2014209.100.84%
Sep 2014198.65-5.00%
Oct 2014218.8210.15%
Nov 2014242.0810.63%
Dec 2014261.828.15%
Jan 2015261.16-0.25%
Feb 2015272.264.25%
Mar 2015287.395.56%
Apr 2015276.48-3.80%
May 2015264.74-4.25%
Jun 2015273.323.24%
Jul 2015287.225.08%
Aug 2015241.30-15.99%
Sep 2015230.33-4.55%
Oct 2015232.000.73%
Nov 2015224.46-3.25%
Dec 2015232.653.65%
Jan 2016234.310.71%
Feb 2016227.51-2.90%
Mar 2016212.28-6.69%
Apr 2016207.99-2.02%
May 2016205.05-1.42%
Jun 2016214.674.69%
Jul 2016189.61-11.68%
Aug 2016198.294.58%
Sep 2016190.58-3.89%
Oct 2016196.813.27%
Nov 2016193.80-1.53%
Dec 2016204.095.31%
Jan 2017206.171.02%
Feb 2017205.85-0.15%
Mar 2017202.30-1.72%
Apr 2017201.33-0.48%
May 2017217.728.14%
Jun 2017219.941.02%
Jul 2017207.83-5.51%
Aug 2017214.183.05%
Sep 2017208.36-2.71%
Oct 2017215.023.20%
Nov 2017214.08-0.44%
Dec 2017223.934.60%
Jan 2018221.90-0.91%
Feb 2018235.626.18%
Mar 2018234.38-0.53%
Apr 2018227.25-3.04%
May 2018229.771.11%
Jun 2018212.59-7.48%
Jul 2018193.64-8.92%
Aug 2018215.9111.50%
Sep 2018213.36-1.18%
Oct 2018206.84-3.06%
Nov 2018207.910.51%
Dec 2018219.475.56%
Jan 2019216.74-1.25%
Feb 2019225.053.84%
Mar 2019226.280.55%
Apr 2019221.28-2.21%
May 2019222.710.64%
Jun 2019209.60-5.89%
Jul 2019208.92-0.32%
Aug 2019196.40-5.99%
Sep 2019198.200.91%
Oct 2019216.089.02%
Nov 2019214.22-0.86%
Dec 2019216.200.92%
Jan 2020217.450.58%
Feb 2020217.930.22%
Mar 2020229.135.14%
Apr 2020234.342.28%
May 2020245.664.83%
Jun 2020231.34-5.83%
Jul 2020236.032.03%
Aug 2020250.756.24%

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