Soybean Oil Monthly Price - Russian Ruble per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Jun 2025: -2,987.320 (-3.12%)
Chart

Description: Soybean oil (Any origin), crude, f.o.b. ex-mill Netherlands

Unit: Russian Ruble per Metric Ton



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

See also: Soybean Oil production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Soybean oil is a vegetable oil extracted from soybeans and traded on commodity markets as a refined or crude edible oil, with the benchmark often quoted in US dollars per metric ton. A common reference point is soybean oil, crude, FOB ex-mill Illinois, which reflects pricing at a major processing and export corridor in the United States. The oil is produced as part of the soybean crushing process, alongside soybean meal, so its market is closely linked to the economics of oilseed processing rather than to oilseed farming alone.

Soybean oil is used primarily in food applications such as cooking oil, frying oil, margarine, shortening, and processed foods. It also serves as a feedstock for industrial uses, including soaps, lubricants, and biodiesel. Because it is one of the principal edible oils in global trade, its price is influenced by competition with other vegetable oils and by the balance between food, feed, and industrial demand. Its market structure reflects the dual nature of soybeans as both an oil source and a protein meal source.

Supply Drivers

Supply is shaped first by soybean production, because soybean oil is a co-product of crushing beans into oil and meal. The main producing regions are the United States, Brazil, Argentina, China, and parts of the European and Asian oilseed belt, where climate, soil quality, and farm infrastructure support large-scale soybean cultivation. Output depends on planting decisions, weather during the growing season, and harvest conditions. Soybeans are an annual crop, so supply responds each crop cycle rather than through continuous extraction.

Weather sensitivity is a central feature. Drought, excessive rainfall, heat stress, and frost can affect yields and oil content, while pests and plant disease can reduce harvested volumes or raise production costs. Because crushing capacity, rail links, river transport, ports, and storage facilities shape the movement of beans and oil, logistical bottlenecks can influence local basis levels and export availability. In South America, transport from inland growing areas to coastal export terminals is often a key constraint.

Supply also depends on the economics of crushing. Crushers respond to the relative value of soybean oil and soybean meal, so changes in one co-product affect the incentive to process beans. This makes soybean oil supply partly a function of meal demand, not only edible oil demand. Inventory carryover, refinery capacity, and the availability of competing vegetable oils also affect how quickly supply reaches end users.

Demand Drivers

Demand comes from both food and industrial uses. In food markets, soybean oil is valued for its neutral flavor, broad availability, and suitability for frying, baking, and processed foods. It is widely used by food manufacturers because it blends well with other ingredients and has a relatively stable supply chain. Household cooking demand is important in many countries, while industrial food processing creates large, steady offtake tied to population growth and urbanization.

A major structural demand channel is biodiesel and other renewable fuel uses, where soybean oil competes with other feedstocks such as rapeseed oil, palm oil, and used cooking oil. This link ties soybean oil demand to energy markets and to policy frameworks that encourage liquid biofuels. In addition, soybean oil competes with palm oil, sunflower oil, canola oil, and animal fats in both food and industrial applications, so substitution is a major price mechanism. When one vegetable oil becomes relatively expensive, buyers often switch to another where formulation and logistics allow.

Seasonality matters because food and fuel demand can vary with weather, holidays, and agricultural processing cycles, but the larger driver is the long-run expansion of edible oil consumption with income growth and population growth. In many markets, soybean oil demand is also influenced by the protein meal market indirectly, because crushing economics determine how much oil is available.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Soybean oil prices are sensitive to the US dollar because the commodity is globally traded and priced in dollars. A stronger dollar can make dollar-denominated oils more expensive for non-US buyers, while a weaker dollar can support import demand. Interest rates matter through inventory financing and storage costs: higher carrying costs tend to discourage stockholding and can alter the shape of futures curves. Like other storable agricultural commodities, soybean oil can move between contango and backwardation depending on nearby supply tightness, harvest timing, and storage economics.

The commodity also responds to broader inflation and energy-market conditions. Because vegetable oils are used in biofuels and food processing, soybean oil can show linkage to crude oil and diesel markets through substitution and blending economics. Futures market positioning, crush margins, and cross-commodity spreads between soybean oil, soybean meal, and soybeans are important for hedgers and processors. The market is therefore shaped by both physical supply-demand balances and financial relationships across related agricultural and energy contracts.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 202195,658.61-
Apr 2021105,512.2010.30%
May 2021116,493.1010.41%
Jun 2021110,202.60-5.40%
Jul 2021108,640.50-1.42%
Aug 2021105,512.80-2.88%
Sep 2021101,973.60-3.35%
Oct 2021105,893.703.84%
Nov 2021104,310.70-1.49%
Dec 2021104,064.70-0.24%
Jan 2022112,700.708.30%
Feb 2022124,604.2010.56%
Mar 2022201,314.4061.56%
Apr 2022150,715.50-25.13%
May 2022124,103.20-17.66%
Jun 202299,451.62-19.86%
Jul 202290,021.91-9.48%
Aug 202296,542.737.24%
Sep 202292,343.10-4.35%
Oct 202296,716.484.74%
Nov 2022100,399.703.81%
Dec 202291,874.64-8.49%
Jan 202393,292.731.54%
Feb 202390,627.67-2.86%
Mar 202384,722.59-6.52%
Apr 202383,612.09-1.31%
May 202378,336.22-6.31%
Jun 202384,437.987.79%
Jul 2023103,070.9022.07%
Aug 2023107,574.104.37%
Sep 2023107,448.50-0.12%
Oct 2023109,619.902.02%
Nov 2023101,250.90-7.63%
Dec 202396,554.38-4.64%
Jan 202486,270.21-10.65%
Feb 202483,469.05-3.25%
Mar 202488,575.106.12%
Apr 202489,106.370.60%
May 202489,598.200.55%
Jun 202488,776.47-0.92%
Jul 202494,312.546.24%
Aug 202492,101.05-2.34%
Sep 202495,552.523.75%
Oct 2024105,439.5010.35%
Nov 2024114,907.208.98%
Dec 2024109,465.50-4.74%
Jan 2025104,772.90-4.29%
Feb 202598,632.33-5.86%
Mar 202586,873.70-11.92%
Apr 202593,153.237.23%
May 202593,352.410.21%
Jun 202592,671.29-0.73%

Top Companies

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

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