Benchmark contracts
| Benchmark | Type | Contract spec | Unit | Range | As of | Deliverable grade |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CBOT WheatHeadline | futures | ZW (SRW) | USD cents/bushel | 5.2–6.4 | May 2026 | US #2 SRW (substitutions allowed at differentials for HRW, HRS) |
| KCBT Wheat | futures | KE (HRW) | USD cents/bushel | 6.1–7.2 | May 2026 | US #2 HRW, 11.5% protein minimum |
| MGEX Wheat | futures | MWE (HRS) | USD cents/bushel | 6.4–7.5 | May 2026 | US #2 HRS Dark Northern Spring, 13.5% protein |
| Euronext Milling Wheat | futures | EBM (Ble Meunier) | EUR/MT | 235–265 | May 2026 | EU Class 1-2 milling wheat, French origin (Rouen) |
| ASX Eastern Australia Wheat | futures | WM | AUD/MT | 340–385 | May 2026 | — |
| Russia Black Sea (Novorossiysk) | physical_fob | GOST 4th class 12.5% protein | USD/MT | 235–255 | May 2026 | — |
| France Rouen | physical_fob | EU Class 2 milling | USD/MT | 250–275 | May 2026 | — |
| Germany Hamburg | physical_fob | EU B-quality 12% protein | USD/MT | 265–285 | May 2026 | — |
| US Gulf HRW | physical_fob | US #2 HRW 11.5% | USD/MT | 260–285 | May 2026 | — |
| US PNW SW | physical_fob | US #2 SW | USD/MT | 240–260 | May 2026 | — |
| Argentina Up River | physical_fob | Trigo Pan Grado 2 | USD/MT | 245–270 | May 2026 | — |
| Australia Kwinana | physical_fob | APW 10.5% protein | USD/MT | 295–320 | May 2026 | — |
| Canada Vancouver | physical_fob | CWRS 13.5% | USD/MT | 310–340 | May 2026 | — |
| Ukraine Odesa | physical_fob | feed grade | USD/MT | 215–240 | May 2026 | — |
| Wheat-Corn Substitution Ratio | spread_economics | Wheat/Corn price ratio | ratio | — | ongoing | — |
Volatility drivers
Wheat pricing is shaped by a small set of recurring forces. On the supply side, black sea geopolitics (russia-ukraine war), russian export tax/quota policy (formula-based), northern hemisphere weather june-august (winter wheat harvest) 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. Spring wheat fill in Canada/USA July-August, Australian/Argentine harvest October-January, Wheat-Corn substitution ratio (1.10-1.30) 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 wheat pricing should track all four layers — supply, demand, policy, and FX — not just the headline benchmark.
Premium structure
Differentials between benchmarks reveal where physical wheat trades relative to the futures reference and how regional grades price against the global standard.
| Benchmark | Differential | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| CBOT Wheat | Soft Red Winter benchmark - lowest of US classes | US #2 SRW (substitutions allowed at differentials for HRW, HRS) |
| KCBT Wheat | Premium $0.40-1.00/bu over CBOT SRW reflecting protein and milling utility | US #2 HRW, 11.5% protein minimum |
| MGEX Wheat | Premium $0.20-0.80/bu over KCBT reflecting protein | US #2 HRS Dark Northern Spring, 13.5% protein |
| Euronext Milling Wheat | European wheat reference | EU Class 1-2 milling wheat, French origin (Rouen) |
| ASX Eastern Australia Wheat | — | |
| Russia Black Sea (Novorossiysk) | Discount $5-15 to CBOT | |
| France Rouen | Premium $5-15 | |
| Germany Hamburg | Premium $10-20 | |
| US Gulf HRW | Premium $20-30 | |
| US PNW SW | Reference (CBOT-aligned) | |
| Argentina Up River | Discount $0-10 | |
| Australia Kwinana | Premium $35-50 (premium quality) | |
| Canada Vancouver | Premium $50-75 (high protein) | |
| Ukraine Odesa | Discount $20-35 | |
| Wheat-Corn Substitution Ratio | ≤1.10 = aggressive feed substitution; ≥1.25 = pure milling demand |
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