Benchmark contracts
| Benchmark | Type | Contract spec | Unit | Range | As of | Deliverable grade |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CBOT SoybeansHeadline | futures | ZS | USD cents/bushel | 10.5–11.2 | Feb 2026 | US #2 Yellow Soybeans |
| Dalian Commodity Exchange | futures | A | CNY/MT | — | — | Chinese domestic soybeans |
| US Gulf Soybeans | physical_fob | US #2 Yellow | USD/MT | 400–425 | Feb 2026 | — |
| US Pacific Northwest Soybeans | physical_fob | US #2 Yellow | USD/MT | 405–430 | Feb 2026 | — |
| Brazil Paranagua/Santos | physical_fob | Type 2 | USD/MT | 385–410 | Feb 2026 | — |
| Argentina Up River (Rosario) | physical_fob | Argentine Standard | USD/MT | 390–415 | Feb 2026 | — |
| US Soybean Crush Margin | crush_economics | Crush margin = (meal value + oil value) - bean cost - operating cost | USD/bushel | — | Feb 2026 | — |
Volatility drivers
Soybeans pricing is shaped by a small set of recurring forces. On the supply side, brazilian/argentine harvest weather q1, us planting weather april-may, us growing season weather june-august drive most of the variance year-over-year. Production geography — concentrated in a handful of dominant exporters — means a single weather event or policy shift in one origin transmits to global prices within days.
Demand-side pressure compounds these supply shocks. China demand pace + Sinograin stockpiling, USDA WASDE monthly, USDA Crop Progress weekly all influence buyer urgency and willingness to absorb premium. The relationship between futures and physical FOB markets reflects these expectations — when the futures curve flattens, it signals consensus on near-term supply; when it steepens, the market is pricing in scarcity or surplus.
Policy and currency complete the picture. Export taxes, import quotas, and cross-rate movements between USD and local currencies in producing regions can move physical prices independently of supply-demand balance. Traders watching soybeans pricing should track all four layers — supply, demand, policy, and FX — not just the headline benchmark.
Premium structure
Differentials between benchmarks reveal where physical soybeans trades relative to the futures reference and how regional grades price against the global standard.
| Benchmark | Differential | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| CBOT Soybeans | Global price reference | US #2 Yellow Soybeans |
| Dalian Commodity Exchange | Chinese domestic pricing - tracks but not aligned with CBOT due to import tariff/quota | Chinese domestic soybeans |
| US Gulf Soybeans | Reference + freight basis | |
| US Pacific Northwest Soybeans | Premium $5-10 (Asian destination basis) | |
| Brazil Paranagua/Santos | Discount $10-20 typical | |
| Argentina Up River (Rosario) | Discount/premium varies by season + ARS volatility | |
| US Soybean Crush Margin | When margin compresses, crushers idle = upstream demand drops |
Atlas Tradex matches buyers with verified counterparties offering soybeans at current market levels. Compare price, origin, and compliance posture in one view.
Compare suppliers →