Skip to main content
AgTecher Logo

Market Analysis

In-depth commodity price analysis, production data, and market intelligence

Commodities
18M Data

Cocoa Prices

Price development, climate index, production overview, and real-time news from major producing regions

Current
$6,250/MT
+49% YoY
Commodities
24M Data

Wheat Prices

Global wheat market analysis including Black Sea region, North America, and Australia production trends

Current
$6.05/bu
+3.4% YoY
Commodities
18M Data

Coffee Prices

Arabica and Robusta price analysis with climate impact and supply chain disruptions from Brazil and Vietnam

Current
$2.18/lb
+11.8% YoY
Commodities
18M Data

Corn Prices

US corn belt production, weather patterns, ethanol demand, and export market dynamics analysis

Current
$4.25/bu
-5.9% YoY
Commodities
24M Data

Fertilizer Prices (NPK)

Comprehensive NPK fertilizer market analysis including urea, phosphate, and potash with global supply dynamics

Current
$385/MT
-12.5% YoY
Commodities
24M Data

Urea Prices

Nitrogen fertilizer market trends, natural gas price correlation, and production from major exporters

Current
$295/MT
-18.2% YoY
Commodities
24M Data

Potash Prices

Potassium fertilizer supply from Canada, Russia, and Belarus with geopolitical impact analysis

Current
$310/MT
-8.9% YoY
Commodities
18M Data

Soybean Prices

US, Brazil, and Argentina production with China demand patterns and crushing margins analysis

Current
$10.85/bu
+6.2% YoY
Stocks
DE36M Data

Deere & Company

Leading agricultural machinery manufacturer. Analysis of equipment sales, precision agriculture adoption, and market share

Current
$548.20
+31.0% YoY
Stocks
NTR36M Data

Nutrien Ltd.

World's largest potash producer. Fertilizer market trends, crop nutrient demand, and sustainable agriculture impact

Current
$78.50
+31.3% YoY

Global Market Indicators

Real-time monitoring of key indicators affecting agricultural markets worldwide

Climate & Environment

ENSO Index

El Niño / La Niña

Neutral
+0.4°C
↑ Warming trend
Source: NOAA CPC
What does this mean?

ENSO (El Niño-Southern Oscillation) ENSO (El Niño-Southern Oscillation) at +0.4°C indicates neutral conditions with a warming trend. El Niño (>+0.5°C) brings drought to some regions, excessive rain to others.

Global weather driver: ENSO phases reshape global precipitation patterns, affecting major agricultural regions. Strong El Niño events can reduce yields in Southeast Asia, Australia, and parts of Africa.

Agricultural cascades: Influences drought severity (SPEI -0.8), precipitation patterns (+12% anomaly), and crop production planning. Farmers and traders monitor ENSO forecasts to anticipate price movements and adjust strategies months ahead.

Temperature Anomaly

vs 1951-1980 baseline

High
+1.28°C
↑ Above average
Source: NASA GISTEMP
What does this mean?

Global Temperature Anomaly at +1.28°C above 1951-1980 baseline shows continued warming trend, directly impacting growing seasons and crop stress levels.

Agricultural stress: Higher temperatures increase evapotranspiration (worsening drought, SPEI -0.8), shift pest ranges, reduce yields for heat-sensitive crops, and accelerate phenological stages.

Long-term trend: Correlates with ENSO patterns (+0.4°C), drives adaptation strategies (heat-resistant varieties), and influences policy decisions. Each 0.1°C increase typically reduces global wheat/corn yields by 3-7%, pressuring food security for growing population (8.12B).

NDVI Index

Vegetation Health

Healthy
0.68
↑ Good coverage
Source: NASA MODIS
What does this mean?

NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index) at 0.68 indicates healthy, dense vegetation cover. Scale ranges from -1 to +1, with >0.6 representing vigorous crop growth.

Real-time crop monitoring: Satellite-derived NDVI provides early warning of crop stress before visible symptoms appear. Enables precision interventions and yield forecasting weeks ahead of harvest.

Predictive power: Correlates strongly with final yields and grain production (2,814 Mt). Integrates effects of precipitation (+12%), soil moisture (68%), and temperature (+1.28°C) into a single measurable indicator. Used by insurers, traders, and governments for crop condition assessment.

Drought Index (SPEI)

Global Average

Moderate
-0.8
⚠ Watch zones active
Source: NOAA / Copernicus
What does this mean?

The SPEI (Standardized Precipitation-Evapotranspiration Index) measures drought severity on a scale from -3 (extreme drought) to +3 (extremely wet). A value of -0.8 indicates moderate drought conditions globally.

Impact on agriculture: Moderate drought stress affects crop yields and increases irrigation demand, directly correlating with higher water reservoir usage and elevated energy costs for pumping.

Connection to other indicators: Works inversely with precipitation (+12% anomaly helps offset drought) and soil moisture (0.32 m³/m³). Prolonged drought typically drives up grain prices (FAO Index) and increases demand for fertilizers as farmers optimize limited water resources.

Soil Moisture

Top 5cm Average

Normal
0.32 m³/m³
→ Stable levels
Source: NASA SMAP
What does this mean?
68% capacity

Soil Moisture measures water content in the top 5cm of soil, expressed as cubic meters of water per cubic meter of soil (m³/m³). At 0.32 m³/m³ and 68% capacity, conditions are ideal for most crops.

Agricultural significance: Optimal soil moisture reduces irrigation needs (lowering diesel/energy costs), supports healthy crop development, and maximizes fertilizer uptake efficiency.

Indicator relationships: Directly influenced by precipitation (+12% anomaly maintains good levels) and inversely related to drought stress (SPEI -0.8). Stable moisture supports production volumes and helps moderate commodity price volatility.

Precipitation

30-day Anomaly

Above Avg
+12%
↑ vs historical avg
Source: NOAA / CHIRPS
What does this mean?

The Precipitation Anomaly shows deviation from historical 30-day average rainfall. +12% indicates above-normal rainfall globally.

Impact: Above-average precipitation replenishes soil moisture (+68% capacity) and mitigates drought stress (SPEI -0.8), reducing irrigation costs and supporting crop growth.

Relationships: Excess rainfall can delay planting/harvesting, affecting grain production forecasts. Correlates inversely with drought index and directly supports reservoir levels.

Energy & Input Costs

Brent Crude Oil

Global benchmark

High
$82.50
↑ +2.4% this week
Source: U.S. EIA
What does this mean?

Brent Crude Oil is the global benchmark for oil prices. At $82.50/barrel (+2.4%), rising oil costs increase transportation and machinery operation expenses.

Agricultural impact: Higher oil prices cascade through the supply chain: increased diesel costs ($3.68), elevated shipping rates (BDI 1,847), and higher fertilizer production costs.

Supply chain effects: Directly correlates with diesel prices, natural gas costs, and freight indices (BDI, FBX). Rising energy prices often compress farm margins and drive food price inflation (FAO Index 127.8).

Natural Gas (Henry Hub)

Fertilizer feedstock

Normal
$3.15
↓ -1.8% this week
Source: U.S. EIA
What does this mean?

Natural Gas prices affect fertilizer production costs (ammonia, urea). At $3.15/MMBtu (-1.8%), lower gas prices benefit nitrogen fertilizer manufacturers.

Cost savings: Natural gas is the primary feedstock for nitrogen fertilizer. Lower prices reduce production costs, potentially lowering fertilizer prices and improving farm profitability.

Industry linkage: Inversely correlates with fertilizer export restrictions (12 countries) and production volumes. Works alongside oil prices to determine overall energy-related agricultural input costs.

Diesel Price Index

Farm machinery fuel

Normal
$3.68
→ Stable
Source: U.S. EIA
What does this mean?

Diesel fuel powers most farm machinery and irrigation systems. At $3.68/gallon (stable), diesel represents a significant operational cost for farmers.

Operational costs: Diesel prices directly affect planting, harvesting, transportation, and irrigation expenses. Stable prices provide cost predictability for farm operations.

Price transmission: Follows Brent crude ($82.50, +2.4%) with a lag. Higher diesel costs often force farmers to optimize operations, potentially impacting yield and affecting freight costs (BDI 1,847).

Export Restrictions

Fertilizer trade limits

High
12
⚠ Active measures
Source: IFPRI Tracker
What does this mean?
RussiaActive
ChinaPartial
IndiaPartial

Fertilizer Export Restrictions show 12 countries currently limiting or banning fertilizer exports to secure domestic supply.

Supply crisis: Restrictions from major exporters (Russia, China, India) reduce global availability, driving up prices and creating shortages in import-dependent regions.

Chain reaction: Reduced fertilizer access lowers crop yields, increases production costs, and drives food price inflation (FAO Index 127.8). Correlates with natural gas prices ($3.15) as gas is key fertilizer feedstock.

Production & Supply

FAO Food Price Index

Global commodity prices

Moderate
127.8
↓ -3.2% YoY
Source: FAO Stat Portal
What does this mean?

FAO Food Price Index tracks global food commodity prices. At 127.8 (-3.2% YoY), prices are moderating but remain above long-term averages.

Market conditions: Declining prices suggest improving supply conditions and stable demand, despite moderate drought (SPEI -0.8) and geopolitical risks (GPR 142.5).

Comprehensive indicator: Aggregates wheat, corn, soy, and meat markets. Influenced by energy costs, weather patterns, freight rates, and geopolitical tensions. Lower index benefits consumers while potentially squeezing farmer margins.

Grain Production

Global output

Growing
2,814 Mt
↑ +1.5% vs 2024
Source: FAO / USDA WASDE
What does this mean?
Wheat
785Mt
Corn
1,210Mt
Rice
819Mt

Global Grain Production at 2,814 Mt (+1.5%) covers wheat (785Mt), corn (1,210Mt), and rice (819Mt) - the three staples feeding most of humanity.

Supply outlook: Growth despite moderate drought (SPEI -0.8) shows resilience from improved yields (+2.8%), good precipitation (+12%), and technology adoption (4,820 AgTech patents).

Market balance: Production growth helps moderate FAO Index (127.8, -3.2%). However, growing population (8.12B, +0.9%) and rising meat consumption (42.8 kg/capita) maintain demand pressure.

Yield Efficiency

Productivity gains

Improving
+2.8%
↑ vs 5-year avg
Source: FAO FAOSTAT
What does this mean?
Wheat3.5 t/ha
Corn6.2 t/ha

Yield Efficiency at +2.8% vs 5-year average shows continued productivity gains. Wheat (3.5 t/ha) and corn (6.2 t/ha) both exceed historical benchmarks.

Productivity driver: Improvements come from precision agriculture (4,820 patents), better genetics, optimal soil moisture (68% capacity), and despite fertilizer restrictions (12 countries).

Critical multiplier: With limited arable land expansion, yield gains are essential. Each 1% improvement adds ~28Mt to global production without new farmland, helping feed growing population (+220K daily).

Transport & Supply Chains

Baltic Dry Index

Shipping costs

Rising
1,847
↑ +8.2% WoW
Source: Trading Economics
What does this mean?

Baltic Dry Index (BDI) measures shipping costs for dry bulk commodities. At 1,847 (+8.2% WoW), rising freight rates increase import/export costs.

Trade implications: Higher shipping costs raise grain import prices, affecting food security in import-dependent regions. Can widen local price differentials and impact arbitrage opportunities.

Supply chain indicator: Rises with strong commodity demand and port congestion. Correlates with container freight (FBX $3,245) and energy prices. Elevated BDI can signal robust global trade despite geopolitical risks.

Container Freight (FBX)

Global shipping rates

Normal
$3,245
→ Stable
Source: Freightos
What does this mean?

Freightos Baltic Index (FBX) tracks container shipping costs. At $3,245 (stable), rates remain elevated compared to pre-pandemic levels.

Input costs: Container freight affects fertilizer, equipment, and packaged food transport. Stable rates provide cost certainty but remain high, impacting agricultural input prices.

Logistics network: Works with BDI (1,847) to indicate global logistics health. Influenced by fuel costs ($82.50 oil) and port efficiency. High freight costs can slow agricultural innovation adoption.

Supply Chain Pressure

Logistics stress

Normal
0.32
↓ Below average
Source: NY Fed / FRED
What does this mean?

Supply Chain Pressure at 0.32 (below average) indicates normalized logistics after pandemic disruptions. Lower values signal better goods flow.

Easing conditions: Improved port efficiency (94% normal operations), stable container freight (FBX $3,245), and rising Baltic Dry Index (1,847, +8.2%) show healthy global trade recovery.

Agricultural impact: Reduced bottlenecks lower input costs (fertilizer, machinery), enable timely deliveries, and help moderate food prices (FAO Index 127.8, -3.2%). Critical for seasonal agriculture operations.

Major Port Activity

Shipping route health

Healthy
94%
↑ Normal operations
Source: UNCTAD
What does this mean?
Suez Canal● Normal
Panama Canal● Reduced

Port Activity at 94% shows major shipping routes functioning well. Suez Canal (normal) handles grain from Black Sea; Panama Canal (reduced) faces drought constraints.

Trade route health: Strong port operations support elevated shipping volumes (BDI 1,847, +8.2%) and stable container rates (FBX $3,245), keeping agricultural trade flowing despite geopolitical tensions (GPR 142.5).

Vulnerabilities: Panama Canal water restrictions force longer routes, increasing costs and emissions. Geopolitical risks to Suez could severely disrupt grain exports from major producers (Ukraine, Russia).

Demand & Consumption

World Population

Global growth

Growing
8.12B
↑ +0.9% annual growth
Source: UN Data
What does this mean?
Daily increase:
+220,000

World Population at 8.12 billion (+0.9% annually, +220K daily) represents the fundamental driver of agricultural demand. Every new person needs ~2,945 kcal/day.

Demand pressure: Population growth requires increasing grain production (2,814 Mt, +1.5%) faster than growth rate. Rising incomes (GDP +2.4%) also boost meat consumption (42.8 kg/capita), multiplying grain demand.

Challenge ahead: Feeding additional 80M people annually requires productivity gains (yield +2.8%, patents 4,820) since arable land is finite. Climate stress (SPEI -0.8) and input constraints (fertilizer restrictions in 12 countries) complicate this.

Calorie Consumption

Global average

Adequate
2,945
kcal/capita/day
Source: FAO FAOSTAT
What does this mean?
High income: 3,380
Low income: 2,195

Calorie Consumption at 2,945 kcal/capita/day (global average) masks huge inequality: high-income (3,380) vs low-income (2,195). Below 2,100 kcal indicates undernourishment.

Development indicator: Rising GDP (+2.4%) typically increases calorie intake and diet quality (more meat: 42.8 kg/capita). This shifts demand from grains to animal products, multiplying agricultural requirements.

Food security lens: Low-income nations vulnerable to price shocks (FAO Index 127.8), supply disruptions (geopolitical risk 142.5), and strong dollar (DXY 103.45) making imports expensive. Climate stress (SPEI -0.8) threatens their production too.

Meat Consumption

Per capita annually

Rising
42.8 kg
per capita annually
Source: FAO FAOSTAT
What does this mean?

Global meat consumption averages 42.8 kg per capita annually, a key driver of feed grain demand (corn, soy).

Demand dynamics: Meat consumption links directly to grain prices through feed requirements. Rising global income (GDP/capita growth +2.4%) typically increases meat demand, supporting grain prices.

Value chain: Higher meat consumption increases demand for corn and soybeans, affecting FAO Index (127.8). Influenced by GDP growth, climate conditions for feed production, and trade policies.

Global GDP/Capita

Economic growth

Growing
$12,850
↑ +2.4% YoY
Source: World Bank
What does this mean?

Global GDP/Capita at $12,850 (+2.4%) reflects economic growth that drives agricultural demand evolution - not just quantity but quality (meat: 42.8 kg/capita vs grains).

Prosperity linkage: Rising incomes increase protein demand, expand food variety, and boost discretionary consumption. Also funds technology adoption (4,820 patents), infrastructure (port efficiency 94%), and sustainable practices.

Market dynamics: Economic growth supports input investments (fertilizer, machinery) despite high oil ($82.50) and interest rates (5.33%). Slowdowns reduce demand elasticity, making farmers more price-sensitive to FAO Index (127.8).

Geopolitics & Market Risks

Geopolitical Risk Index

Global tensions

High
142.5
⚠ Elevated
Source: Caldara & Iacoviello
What does this mean?

Geopolitical Risk Index (GPR) at 142.5 indicates elevated global tensions affecting agricultural trade, with 54 active conflicts impacting key production regions.

Market volatility: High geopolitical risk disrupts trade routes, triggers export restrictions (12 countries for fertilizers), and creates supply uncertainty, leading to price spikes and hoarding.

Systemic risks: Influences freight routes (BDI 1,847), trade flows, energy security, and food security. Elevated GPR often correlates with higher commodity prices and increased price volatility across all agricultural markets.

Active Conflicts

Affecting agriculture

High
54
affecting food security
Source: ACLED / UCDP
What does this mean?
High intensity8
Medium intensity18
Low intensity28

Active Conflicts at 54 total (8 high-intensity, 18 medium, 28 low) directly impact agricultural production, trade routes, and food access in affected regions.

Food security impact: High-intensity conflicts typically disrupt farming operations, destroy infrastructure, and displace populations. Ukraine-Russia conflict alone reduced global grain exports by millions of tons, contributing to GPR Index (142.5).

Cascading effects: Conflicts drive port disruptions, trade restrictions (fertilizer bans in 12 countries), shipping route changes (Panama/Suez issues), and refugee crises that strain neighboring regions' food systems. Elevates FAO Index volatility and undermines long-term agricultural investment.

USD DXY Index

Currency strength

High
103.45
↑ Strong dollar
Source: Federal Reserve / FRED
What does this mean?

Dollar Index (DXY) at 103.45 shows a strong USD, making US agricultural exports more expensive for foreign buyers.

Trade competitiveness: Strong dollar reduces demand for US grains in international markets, potentially lowering domestic prices. Conversely, makes imports cheaper for US consumers and manufacturers.

Currency effects: Inversely affects global commodity prices (FAO Index). Influences international trade patterns, export competitiveness, and emerging market food affordability. Strong dollar often pressures developing nations' food security.

Export Concentration

Top 3 exporters share

High
68%
Top 3 exporters share
Source: FAO AMIS
What does this mean?
Wheat45%
Corn62%

Export Concentration at 68% shows that top 3 exporters (wheat 45%, corn 62%) dominate global grain trade, creating supply chain vulnerabilities.

Systemic risk: High concentration means disruptions in major exporters (Russia, Ukraine, US, Brazil) disproportionately impact global food security. Active conflicts (54) in producing regions amplify this risk.

Market implications: Concentration drives price volatility when geopolitical risks (GPR 142.5) materialize. Fertilizer restrictions (12 countries) and shipping disruptions (Panama/Suez) can quickly cascade into global food crises, as import-dependent nations have limited alternative sources.

Technology & Efficiency

Yield Efficiency Index

Productivity trend

Improving
112.5
↑ +2.1% annually
Source: FAO / World Bank
What does this mean?

Yield Efficiency Index at 112.5 (+2.1% annually) tracks productivity improvements relative to a baseline (100 = 2020). Shows long-term trend of getting more output from same inputs.

Technology multiplier: Driven by precision agriculture (32% adoption), mechanization (58% global), and innovation (4,820 patents). Each point improvement saves resources equivalent to thousands of hectares.

Sustainability key: Essential for feeding growing population (8.12B, +0.9%) without expanding farmland. Reduces pressure on forests, lowers per-unit emissions, and maintains profitability despite input cost pressures (oil $82.50).

Precision Ag Adoption

Global farmland

Growing
32%
of global farmland
Source: OECD Reports
What does this mean?
32%

Precision Agriculture at 32% global adoption uses GPS, sensors, drones, and AI for site-specific crop management. Optimizes inputs (water, fertilizer, pesticides) down to sub-meter resolution.

Efficiency gains: Typically reduces fertilizer use 15-25%, water 20-30%, while increasing yields 10-20%. Critical for managing drought (SPEI -0.8) and fertilizer restrictions (12 countries).

Adoption barrier: Capital intensive, requires connectivity and training. High-income regions (95% mechanized) adopt faster. Patents (4,820) show innovation continues, potentially lowering costs for broader adoption.

Mechanization Rate

Global average

Moderate
58%
global average
Source: FAO FAOSTAT
What does this mean?
High income95%
Low income22%

Mechanization Rate at 58% global average masks huge inequality: high-income (95%) vs low-income (22%). Mechanization boosts productivity and reduces labor dependency.

Productivity driver: Mechanized farms achieve higher yields (wheat 3.5 t/ha, corn 6.2 t/ha) and lower per-unit costs. Critical for scaling production to meet population growth (8.12B, +0.9%).

Development gap: Low-income regions face capital constraints, limiting adoption. Rising GDP (+2.4%) enables investment, but high oil prices ($82.50) and interest rates (5.33%) slow mechanization expansion in developing markets.

AgTech Patents

Innovation activity

High
4,820
↑ +12% YoY
Source: WIPO / USPTO
What does this mean?

AgTech Patents at 4,820 (+12% YoY) reflect accelerating innovation in agricultural technology, from robotics to AI and biotechnology.

Innovation pipeline: Growing patent activity signals future productivity gains. Technologies in development (precision ag, automation, biotech) will drive yield efficiency (112.5 index) and help feed growing population.

Market transformation: Patents cover drones, sensors, AI models, and genetic improvements. Adoption depends on costs, connectivity, and farmer training. High innovation activity suggests strong long-term productivity outlook despite current challenges (drought, fertilizer restrictions).

Data Sources

Reuters, Trading Economics, Bloomberg, ICCO, USDA, World Bank

Analysis Depth

Price trends, Climate data, Production stats, Market sentiment

Coverage Period

18-36 months historical data with real-time updates