World: Further increase in barley crop forecast stretches more the already quite comfortable supply situation
A further increase in the global barley crop25 forecast of +2.4 mln tonnes to 148.7 mln tonnes, stretches further the already quite comfortable supply situation, RMI Analytics said in their latest report.
The total increase in production is the result of improved final yields in Europe (+1.3 mln tonnes), Russia (+0.4 mln tonnes), Ukraine (+0.2 mln tonnes), and an improved forecast for Australias crop (+0.5 mln tonnes). A consequence of this higher production is the ongoing need for increased feed usage, especially in light of the on-going constrained requirements for malt production. Still, even with higher feed usage, ending stocks are to climb by 1.5 mln tonnes to 20.8 mln tonnes by the end of crop25.
Global barley trade is expected to increase during 2025/26, better than crop24 but still trailing crop23 levels.
The global balance of barley supply and demand is increasingly tilting towards a comfortable, or even oversupplied, situation. Until there is a resurgence in malting barley demand, a significant amount of quality malting barley will, regrettably, end up in feed barley channels.
The global trend for malting barley prices continues to decline, driven by a comfortable supply situation alongside falling beer volumes and reduced whisky production. Furthermore, the activities for crop24 have largely wrapped up, with limited prospects in Australia and Argentina. Consequently, prices for crop24 and crop25 are aligning, leading to the disappearance of any previous premium associated with the old crop.
The competition for any emerging demand is anticipated to be fierce, as all origins have significant volumes still available for sale.