S. Korea’s feed importers trade wheat off against corn as prices slip

Heavy falls in corn futures have failed to stimulate buying interest from South Korea's huge feedmaking sector, with importers...

Heavy falls in corn futures have failed to stimulate buying interest from South Korea’s huge feedmaking sector, with importers choosing instead to book feed wheat cargoes and hope for further falls on corn, trade sources told Agricensus.

Traders expect the buying to remain limited until corn falls to a discount of around $10-15/mt.  

Animal feed producers in the country, which is one of the biggest corn importers in the world, have recently secured feed wheat cargoes as its superior qualities and better pricing versus corn continue to make it the preferred choice. 

Major Feedmills Group (MFG) booked 65,000 mt of feed wheat from CHS at a tender just last week, followed by a second parcel sold by Olam this week.

The deals were concluded at $313/mt and $304.25/mt CFR South Korea respectively, and come amid heavy falls across futures within the wider agriculture complex with wheat continuing to maintain more competitive pricing. 

Importers began to substitute corn with wheat in spring when corn futures reached multi year-highs and animal feed compound producers have been holding off from buying corn and only dipping into the market to cover their bedrock basic requirements.

“Almost all South Korean buyers are still watching the market price for corn now. They think the price will be lower than these days, so they are still waiting for the bearish market,” a South Korea-based trader told Agricensus.

Nevertheless, according to trade sources, one of South Korea’s biggest corn importers Korea Feed Association (KFA) privately picked up 60,000 mt of corn overnight from Chinese state-owned trader Cofco with the buying likely to be forced on them as they look to plug a gap in supply.

The association paid $315/mt CFR Busan for relatively prompt spot loading position, with the cargo likely to load between August 1-20 from either South America or South Africa, and arrive by September 30.

Most other importers are aiming to pick up supply at around $290-295/mt on a CFR delivered basis into South Korea.

“The price idea for corn is about $10-15 lower than feed wheat. Then they will move,” one trader said.

“South Korean buyers’ target price for corn is way below the current market as they have already bought some positions at a quite high price,” another trader commented on the situation.

What to read next
China's Agriculture Outlook Committee (CAOC) left its 2026/27 soybean import and crush forecasts, as well as corn feed consumption estimates, unchanged in the latest China Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (CASDE) report released on Friday July 10.
A practical read on where US wheat and corn supply stands as the season progresses, and what the second half of the year could hold for buyers in food, animal feed and pet food.
Discover what food and beverage commodity intelligence really means and why independent benchmarks give procurement teams the credibility to challenge costs and defend budgets.
Fastmarkets’ weekly recap of the main movements in global cash markets.
The publication of Fastmarkets' rand fixing prices per tonne for London Metal Exchange trade for Tuesday June 16, 2026 was delayed due to the unavailability of the Standard Bank $/rand conversion rate. Fastmarkets’ pricing database was updated once the rate was available.
US wheat futures and Euronext contracts were mixed on Tuesday June 16, with most US contracts moving lower, while Chicago soft red winter wheat futures posted gains. Euronext contracts also moved higher during the session. Global cash markets remained subdued, with limited activity as buyers largely stayed on the sidelines. Black Sea wheat prices are starting to trend lower under seasonal harvest pressure, while Australia, Europe and Argentina were broadly steady.