Wheat at a two-year high, record global soybean crop, Black Sea and Hormuz disruptions

World wheat has climbed to a two-year high as Black Sea shipping disruption and heat damage in the European Union and the United States tighten supply, even as the prospect of a record global soybean crop keeps oilseed prices steady. Rice and urea firmed, and renewed strain on the Black Sea, the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea kept maritime risk in focus, according to the AMIS Market News Summary for Week 29 (July 2026).

Read the official source: AMIS Market News Summary, Week 29 (FAO). The deeper monthly report is the AMIS Market Monitor. Every figure below is as reported by AMIS.

This week at a glance

SegmentThis week, per AMISDirection
WheatTwo-year high on Black Sea logistics disruption, heat in the EU and US, and a USDA cut to the US crop.Firmer
MaizeFirmed on heat and dryness across the US and Western Europe and Black Sea tension; IGC cut its 2026/27 global forecast.Firmer
SoybeanSteady on favourable Brazil and US crop prospects; IGC sees a record world crop; China’s June imports hit a record.Steady
RiceStrengthened on higher Indian minimum reserve prices, monsoon concerns and record Philippine buying.Firmer
FertilizersSelected urea references rebounded on renewed disruption to Strait of Hormuz transits.Firmer
Trade logisticsBlack Sea, Strait of Hormuz and Red Sea routes under simultaneous strain, keeping freight risk elevated.Disrupted
Vegetable oil and biofuelPalm futures rose on firmer crude; biofuel mandates in the US and Brazil are pulling vegetable oil toward fuel.Firmer
PolicyBrazil raised its ethanol blend from 30 to 32 percent; China opened Australian canola to private crushers; India advanced sugarcane-maize intercropping for ethanol feedstock.Active

Short FAQ

Why did world wheat reach a two-year high this week?

AMIS attributes it to Black Sea shipping disruption, including drone strikes and a halt to Don-Azov canal traffic, combined with heat damage to EU and US crops and a USDA cut to the US harvest. It is a supply and logistics story rather than a demand surge.

What is happening with global soybean prices?

They held steady. The International Grains Council projects a record world crop on larger Brazilian and US harvests, and China’s June imports hit a record on strong Brazilian supply, all of which is keeping oilseed prices contained.

What is AMIS and how often is this published?

AMIS is the Agricultural Market Information System, hosted by FAO and backed by the G20, covering wheat, maize, rice and soybean. It issues this Market News Summary weekly and a deeper Market Monitor monthly.

Where can I read the original AMIS report?

The weekly summary and the monthly Market Monitor are published at amis-outlook.org. Links are in the source line below.

Source

Primary source: AMIS Market News Summary, Week 29, July 2026 (FAO). Deeper monthly analysis: AMIS Market Monitor (FAO). All figures on this page are as reported by AMIS.

Curated and Reviewed by Deepak Chavan.