Wheat Monthly Price - Russian Ruble per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2021 - Jun 2025: -1,450.672 (-7.13%)
Chart

Description: Wheat (U.S.), no. 2 hard red winter Gulf export price; June 2020 backwards, no. 1, hard red winter, ordinary protein, export price delivered at the US Gulf port for prompt or 30 days shipment

Unit: Russian Ruble per Metric Ton



Source: Bloomberg; US Department of Agriculture; World Bank.

See also: Wheat production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Wheat is a staple cereal grain used for flour, semolina, animal feed, and a wide range of processed foods. On commodity markets, wheat is commonly priced in US dollars per metric ton, with benchmark quotations often tied to export grades and delivery points. A widely used reference is Hard Red Winter wheat, No. 1, ordinary protein, FOB Gulf of Mexico, which reflects exportable milling wheat from the United States. Other market references include futures contracts and cash export grades from major producing regions.

Wheat is milled into flour for bread, noodles, biscuits, pastries, and many packaged foods. It is also used in feed rations when feed grains are relatively expensive or when wheat quality is unsuitable for milling. Because wheat is grown across temperate regions and stored relatively well, it functions as both a food staple and a globally traded bulk commodity. Its market structure reflects the interaction of harvest timing, export logistics, milling quality, and the balance between food, feed, and industrial uses.

Supply Drivers

Wheat supply is shaped by climate, soil, and the biological cycle of an annual crop. Major producing regions include North America, Europe, the Black Sea region, Australia, and parts of South Asia and China. Different wheat classes are adapted to different environments: winter wheat relies on cold-season dormancy, while spring wheat is planted in colder or shorter-season areas. This geographic diversity helps stabilize global availability, but local weather remains a dominant supply factor.

Rainfall timing, temperature extremes, frost, heat stress, and drought all affect yield and grain quality. Disease pressure, including rusts and fungal infections, can reduce output or downgrade milling quality. Because wheat is harvested once per crop cycle, supply responds with a lag to price signals; acreage decisions are made before the growing season, and production cannot be expanded quickly after adverse weather. Input costs, especially fertilizer, fuel, and labor, influence planting decisions and crop management.

Transport and storage infrastructure also matter. Exportable wheat must move from inland farms to elevators, rail networks, ports, and ocean freight channels. Bottlenecks in these systems can affect basis levels and regional price spreads even when global supply is adequate. Quality segregation is important because protein content, test weight, and moisture determine whether wheat is suitable for milling, feed, or blending.

Demand Drivers

Wheat demand is driven primarily by food consumption, especially flour-based products such as bread, noodles, pasta, and baked goods. In many countries, wheat is a dietary staple because it stores well, mills efficiently, and can be processed into a broad range of textures and forms. Demand is relatively inelastic in basic food use, but it varies with population growth, urbanization, dietary preferences, and income levels.

A second major demand channel is animal feed. Wheat competes with corn, barley, sorghum, and other feed grains, and its feed use rises when relative prices make it economical or when lower-quality wheat is available. This substitution relationship is important because feed demand can absorb surplus supplies or tighten the market when milling-quality wheat is scarce. Industrial uses are smaller but include starch, gluten, ethanol, and other processed ingredients in some regions.

Seasonality also matters. In many consuming regions, flour demand is steady, but procurement and shipping patterns often follow harvest cycles and storage decisions. Milling demand places a premium on protein content, gluten strength, and uniformity, while feed demand is more flexible on quality. Long-run demand is supported by population growth and the central role of wheat in staple diets, but it also shifts with competition from rice, maize, and other carbohydrates.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Wheat prices are sensitive to the US dollar because international trade is commonly denominated in dollars. A stronger dollar can make US exports less competitive in local-currency terms, while a weaker dollar can support export demand. Interest rates matter through financing and storage costs: grain held in inventory incurs carry costs, so the forward curve reflects the tradeoff between immediate sale and deferred delivery. When storage is abundant, markets can exhibit contango; when nearby supply is tight, nearby prices can strengthen relative to deferred contracts.

Wheat also responds to broader inflation and risk sentiment because it is a globally traded staple with active futures and cash markets. However, its price behavior is driven more by crop fundamentals and logistics than by financial flows alone. Correlation with other agricultural markets often reflects shared weather shocks, fertilizer costs, freight conditions, and substitution among feed grains.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 202120,335.49-
Apr 202121,382.525.15%
May 202121,990.372.84%
Jun 202120,727.95-5.74%
Jul 202121,772.635.04%
Aug 202123,878.969.67%
Sep 202124,608.533.06%
Oct 202125,316.352.88%
Nov 202127,430.208.35%
Dec 202127,786.521.30%
Jan 202228,700.493.29%
Feb 202230,492.406.24%
Mar 202250,028.2164.07%
Apr 202238,329.13-23.38%
May 202233,021.82-13.85%
Jun 202226,092.03-20.99%
Jul 202222,455.58-13.94%
Aug 202223,119.102.95%
Sep 202224,997.868.13%
Oct 202226,877.967.52%
Nov 202225,694.45-4.40%
Dec 202225,186.58-1.98%
Jan 202326,250.634.22%
Feb 202328,781.169.64%
Mar 202328,149.28-2.20%
Apr 202330,700.339.06%
May 202329,147.81-5.06%
Jun 202328,967.07-0.62%
Jul 202331,354.908.24%
Aug 202330,158.13-3.82%
Sep 202330,416.500.86%
Oct 202328,819.61-5.25%
Nov 202325,670.56-10.93%
Dec 202326,455.953.06%
Jan 202425,212.54-4.70%
Feb 202425,491.981.11%
Mar 202425,227.31-1.04%
Apr 202425,312.620.34%
May 202426,246.473.69%
Jun 202423,325.48-11.13%
Jul 202422,748.22-2.47%
Aug 202422,400.62-1.53%
Sep 202424,687.9810.21%
Oct 202426,275.856.43%
Nov 202425,461.46-3.10%
Dec 202425,952.561.93%
Jan 202525,411.64-2.08%
Feb 202524,425.70-3.88%
Mar 202521,934.23-10.20%
Apr 202520,766.91-5.32%
May 202519,022.85-8.40%
Jun 202518,884.81-0.73%

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