Soybean Meal Monthly Price - Bolivar Fuerte per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Feb 2008 - Aug 2018: 82,268,400.000 (8,374,789.00%)
Chart

Description: Soybean meal (any origin), Argentine 45/46% extraction, c.i.f. Rotterdam beginning 1990; previously US 44%

Unit: Bolivar Fuerte per Metric Ton



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

See also: Soybean Meal production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Soybean meal is the protein-rich co-product obtained after soybeans are crushed to extract soybean oil. It is typically priced on commodity markets as soybean meal with 48% protein, delivered CIF Rotterdam, and quoted in US dollars per metric ton. The Rotterdam benchmark reflects international trade in a standardized, exportable form and serves as a reference for feed manufacturers, traders, and processors. Soybean meal is one of the principal ingredients in compound animal feed because it provides a concentrated source of digestible protein and amino acids, especially for poultry, swine, dairy cattle, and aquaculture feed formulations. It is also used in some industrial and food applications, though feed demand dominates. Because meal is produced jointly with soybean oil, its market is linked to the economics of oilseed crushing rather than to a single end-use sector. This co-product structure makes soybean meal an important part of the broader vegetable oils and protein meals complex.

Supply Drivers

Soybean meal supply is determined first by soybean production and then by crushing capacity, transport, and export logistics. The main producing regions are the United States, Brazil, Argentina, and, to a lesser extent, Paraguay, China, and India. These regions dominate because they combine suitable growing conditions, large-scale mechanized farming, and established export infrastructure. Soybeans are an annual crop, so supply responds each harvest cycle to planting decisions, weather during flowering and pod fill, and disease pressure. Drought, excess rainfall, heat stress, and pest outbreaks can reduce yields or delay harvests. In South America, the timing of the harvest and the availability of port capacity strongly affect export flows. In North America, inland transport, river levels, and rail access influence the movement of beans to crushers and export terminals.

Crushing margins also matter because soybean meal is produced jointly with soybean oil. When oil demand is strong relative to meal demand, crushers may run at higher rates, increasing meal output. Conversely, weak crush margins can limit processing. Storage is feasible, but meal is bulky and can be sensitive to moisture and quality loss, so logistics and handling costs are important. Because soybean meal is derived from soybeans, its supply is constrained by the biological cycle of the crop and by the capacity of the global crushing and shipping system.

Demand Drivers

Demand for soybean meal is driven primarily by livestock and poultry feed use. It is valued for its high protein content, consistent amino acid profile, and ease of incorporation into compound feeds. Poultry and swine sectors are especially important consumers because they rely on formulated rations where soybean meal often serves as a core protein ingredient. Dairy and beef feedlots also use it, while aquaculture and pet food industries consume smaller volumes. Demand tends to track meat, milk, and egg production because feed use rises with herd and flock sizes. Population growth, urbanization, and rising incomes support long-run demand for animal protein, which in turn supports meal consumption.

Substitution is an important feature of the market. Soybean meal competes with rapeseed meal, sunflower meal, cottonseed meal, palm kernel meal, and, in some regions, distillers’ grains and other feed by-products. Feed formulators adjust rations based on relative prices, protein content, amino acid balance, and local availability. Corn and other energy feeds are complements because livestock diets combine protein and energy sources. Seasonal patterns can appear where feed demand follows poultry placement cycles, dairy feeding regimes, or regional livestock production rhythms, but the dominant driver is structural feed demand rather than direct human consumption. Regulatory and technology factors, such as feed formulation standards and the use of amino acid supplements, influence how much soybean meal is required per unit of animal output.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Soybean meal prices are influenced by the U.S. dollar because the benchmark is quoted in dollars while production and consumption are spread across many currencies. A stronger dollar can make dollar-priced meal more expensive for importers, while a weaker dollar can support demand. The market is also sensitive to freight costs, interest rates, and storage economics because crushers, merchants, and feed users manage inventories across time and geography. When storage is costly or supply is abundant, futures markets can exhibit contango; when nearby supply is tight relative to demand, backwardation can appear. Soybean meal often moves with the broader oilseed complex, especially soybean oil and soybeans, because crushing economics link the three markets. It also has some correlation with feedgrain markets through livestock ration substitution and with energy markets through freight, fertilizer, and farm input costs.

MonthPriceChange
Feb 2008982.33-
Mar 2008999.281.72%
Apr 20081,106.9110.77%
May 20081,081.63-2.28%
Jun 20081,146.015.95%
Jul 20081,118.56-2.40%
Aug 2008947.21-15.32%
Sep 2008886.02-6.46%
Oct 2008752.67-15.05%
Nov 2008715.65-4.92%
Dec 2008681.68-4.75%
Jan 2009820.6720.39%
Feb 2009849.263.48%
Mar 2009786.88-7.35%
Apr 2009848.347.81%
May 2009959.4313.10%
Jun 2009986.822.85%
Jul 2009944.10-4.33%
Aug 2009971.912.95%
Sep 2009945.66-2.70%
Oct 2009921.11-2.60%
Nov 2009942.702.34%
Dec 2009923.94-1.99%
Jan 20101,049.7013.61%
Feb 20101,030.85-1.80%
Mar 2010963.17-6.56%
Apr 2010969.930.70%
May 2010962.19-0.80%
Jun 2010910.79-5.34%
Jul 2010957.825.16%
Aug 20101,034.578.01%
Sep 20101,062.642.71%
Oct 20101,083.491.96%
Nov 20101,132.894.56%
Dec 20101,164.972.83%
Jan 20111,982.7770.20%
Feb 20112,010.571.40%
Mar 20111,878.54-6.57%
Apr 20111,768.78-5.84%
May 20111,734.42-1.94%
Jun 20111,726.23-0.47%
Jul 20111,760.371.98%
Aug 20111,755.22-0.29%
Sep 20111,733.26-1.25%
Oct 20111,634.22-5.71%
Nov 20111,542.39-5.62%
Dec 20111,508.20-2.22%
Jan 20121,655.079.74%
Feb 20121,742.275.27%
Mar 20121,890.428.50%
Apr 20122,069.039.45%
May 20122,156.664.24%
Jun 20122,208.782.42%
Jul 20122,610.8118.20%
Aug 20122,793.847.01%
Sep 20122,775.95-0.64%
Oct 20122,553.89-8.00%
Nov 20122,434.65-4.67%
Dec 20122,475.871.69%
Jan 20132,257.03-8.84%
Feb 20132,800.8024.09%
Mar 20133,229.7715.32%
Apr 20133,114.14-3.58%
May 20133,234.983.88%
Jun 20133,371.774.23%
Jul 20133,577.346.10%
Aug 20133,389.64-5.25%
Sep 20133,624.796.94%
Oct 20133,675.441.40%
Nov 20133,564.34-3.02%
Dec 20133,578.540.40%
Jan 20143,390.45-5.26%
Feb 20143,586.715.79%
Mar 20143,780.075.39%
Apr 20143,672.24-2.85%
May 20143,569.43-2.80%
Jun 20143,417.73-4.25%
Jul 20143,163.15-7.45%
Aug 20143,155.42-0.24%
Sep 20142,889.04-8.44%
Oct 20142,847.56-1.44%
Nov 20142,976.204.52%
Dec 20142,951.50-0.83%
Jan 20152,781.64-5.76%
Feb 20152,628.37-5.51%
Mar 20152,591.35-1.41%
Apr 20152,501.68-3.46%
May 20152,426.46-3.01%
Jun 20152,431.990.23%
Jul 20152,558.245.19%
Aug 20152,424.82-5.22%
Sep 20152,353.12-2.96%
Oct 20152,342.00-0.47%
Nov 20152,203.05-5.93%
Dec 20152,126.26-3.49%
Jan 20162,114.51-0.55%
Feb 20162,031.62-3.92%
Apr 20163,453.2569.98%
May 20164,205.8621.79%
Jun 20164,665.6110.93%
Jul 20164,388.00-5.95%
Aug 20163,977.03-9.37%
Sep 20163,671.30-7.69%
Oct 20163,609.75-1.68%
Nov 20163,561.08-1.35%
Dec 20163,550.60-0.29%
Jan 20173,701.224.24%
Feb 20173,726.660.69%
Mar 20173,597.98-3.45%
Apr 20173,448.36-4.16%
May 20173,434.89-0.39%
Jun 20173,294.94-4.07%
Jul 20173,400.083.19%
Aug 20173,293.45-3.14%
Sep 20173,412.153.60%
Oct 20173,523.873.27%
Nov 20173,500.33-0.67%
Dec 20173,590.002.56%
Jan 20183,748.014.40%
Feb 20188,155,799.00217,503.60%
Mar 201817,126,890.00110.00%
Apr 201826,543,820.0054.98%
May 201833,604,640.0026.60%
Jun 201834,967,020.004.05%
Jul 201851,154,900.0046.29%
Aug 201882,269,380.0060.82%

Top Companies

Archer Daniels Midland
Website: http://www.adm.com/
Location: Decatur, Illinois, USA

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