Soybeans Monthly Price - Kuwaiti Dinar per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Jun 2020 - Mar 2026: 31.058 (27.31%)
Chart

Description: Soybeans (US), c.i.f. Rotterdam

Unit: Kuwaiti Dinar per Metric Ton



Source: ISTA Mielke GmbH, Oil World; 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

Soybeans are an oilseed crop traded internationally both as a raw agricultural commodity and as a source of two principal processed products: soybean meal and soybean oil. On commodity markets, soybeans are commonly priced in US dollars per metric ton, with physical trade often referenced to export or import benchmarks such as soybeans, US, No. 1, Yellow, CIF Rotterdam. The crop is valued for its dual-use economics: the crushed bean yields protein-rich meal for animal feed and oil for food, industrial uses, and biodiesel feedstock. Because the bean is bulky and relatively low in unit value compared with its processed products, transportation, storage, and crushing margins are central to pricing relationships. Soybeans are also a key benchmark within the broader oilseed complex, linking grain markets, vegetable oil markets, and livestock feed markets. Their market structure reflects the interaction of harvest timing, global trade flows, processing capacity, and substitution with other oilseeds such as rapeseed, sunflowerseed, and palm oil.

Supply Drivers

Soybean supply is shaped by a small number of large producing regions with favorable growing conditions, especially the United States, Brazil, Argentina, China, and parts of the Black Sea and South American agricultural belts. The crop requires a warm growing season and is sensitive to moisture availability during flowering and pod filling, so rainfall patterns and temperature extremes strongly affect yields. Because soybeans are an annual crop, supply responds to planting decisions, weather during the growing season, and harvest conditions rather than to long-lived mine or well depletion cycles. This creates a recurring seasonal pattern in availability and export flow.

Production is also constrained by land competition with corn, wheat, and other crops, since farmers allocate acreage based on relative returns and agronomic rotation needs. In South America, logistics matter greatly: inland transport, river levels, port capacity, and crushing infrastructure influence how quickly beans move from farm to export channels. Storage and handling losses are lower than for many perishables, but quality can still be affected by moisture, heat, and delayed shipment. Disease pressure, pests, and soil fertility management also shape output over time. Because crushing capacity links bean supply to meal and oil production, local processing economics can redirect beans between export and domestic use.

Demand Drivers

Soybean demand is driven by two linked end uses: protein meal for animal feed and vegetable oil for food and industrial consumption. Soybean meal is a core input in poultry, hog, dairy, and aquaculture rations because it provides a concentrated and relatively consistent protein source. This makes soybean demand closely tied to livestock production, feed formulation, and the availability of substitute meals such as rapeseed meal, sunflower meal, and cottonseed meal. Soybean oil competes with other vegetable oils in food processing, frying, margarine, and industrial applications, and it can also be diverted into biofuel production where such markets exist.

Demand is partly seasonal because feed use follows livestock cycles and food oil demand often rises around holiday and cooking seasons in many regions. However, the larger structural driver is population growth, rising meat consumption, and the expansion of processed food systems, all of which increase demand for protein meal and edible oils. Crushing margins matter because they determine whether buyers prefer whole beans or processed products. Trade flows are also influenced by the relative prices of competing oilseeds and oils: when one oilseed becomes expensive, crushers and feed formulators often substitute toward alternatives. In this way, soybeans sit at the center of a broader protein-and-oil complex rather than functioning as a standalone agricultural product.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Soybeans are sensitive to the US dollar because international trade is commonly denominated in dollars, so a stronger dollar can make dollar-priced soybeans more expensive for non-US buyers. Interest rates matter through inventory financing and storage costs: holding physical beans ties up capital, so higher financing costs can pressure nearby prices relative to deferred delivery. Soybeans also exhibit classic agricultural seasonality, with prices often reflecting the balance between harvest-time supply and later consumption needs, which can shape contango or backwardation in futures markets.

Because soybeans are storable but not indefinitely so, the market reflects both physical carrying costs and expectations about future availability. They also tend to correlate with broader grain and oilseed sentiment, especially when weather risk affects multiple crops at once. Inflation can influence nominal prices for agricultural commodities, but the stronger mechanism is usually the interaction of currency values, freight costs, and global feed demand rather than a pure inflation-hedge role.

MonthPriceChange
Jun 2020113.73-
Jul 2020116.982.86%
Aug 2020117.550.48%
Sep 2020129.4810.16%
Oct 2020138.937.29%
Nov 2020152.789.97%
Dec 2020155.431.74%
Jan 2021174.6412.36%
Feb 2021174.900.15%
Mar 2021176.941.17%
Apr 2021180.001.73%
May 2021194.658.14%
Jun 2021184.97-4.97%
Jul 2021180.60-2.36%
Aug 2021176.18-2.45%
Sep 2021167.79-4.77%
Oct 2021166.48-0.78%
Nov 2021166.500.01%
Dec 2021167.680.71%
Jan 2022183.379.36%
Feb 2022200.099.12%
Mar 2022218.999.45%
Apr 2022220.070.49%
May 2022221.860.82%
Jun 2022225.801.78%
Jul 2022208.37-7.72%
Aug 2022206.07-1.10%
Sep 2022205.28-0.39%
Oct 2022193.97-5.51%
Nov 2022200.203.21%
Dec 2022197.93-1.13%
Jan 2023191.46-3.27%
Feb 2023199.164.02%
Mar 2023192.63-3.28%
Apr 2023188.31-2.24%
May 2023182.52-3.07%
Jun 2023181.78-0.41%
Jul 2023194.346.91%
Aug 2023179.63-7.57%
Sep 2023191.036.35%
Oct 2023163.60-14.36%
Nov 2023170.584.27%
Dec 2023168.57-1.18%
Jan 2024168.26-0.19%
Feb 2024159.94-4.94%
Mar 2024149.76-6.37%
Apr 2024146.89-1.91%
May 2024150.552.49%
Jun 2024147.01-2.35%
Jul 2024143.62-2.31%
Aug 2024122.15-14.95%
Sep 2024119.33-2.31%
Oct 2024135.2913.37%
Nov 2024133.81-1.09%
Dec 2024125.83-5.97%
Jan 2025126.700.69%
Feb 2025127.230.41%
Mar 2025123.63-2.82%
Apr 2025125.081.17%
May 2025127.061.58%
Jun 2025127.240.14%
Jul 2025125.15-1.64%
Aug 2025124.31-0.67%
Sep 2025123.15-0.93%
Oct 2025123.270.10%
Nov 2025136.4210.67%
Dec 2025134.44-1.45%
Jan 2026129.75-3.49%
Feb 2026140.268.10%
Mar 2026144.793.23%

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