Wheat Rises After Ukraine Attacks Threaten Black Sea Exports

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Ears of wheat on a farm, operated by Lajoskomarom Gyozelem Kft., in Lajoskomarom, Hungary. (Photographer: Akos Stiller/Bloomberg)

Wheat extended gains after Ukraine used sea drones to cripple a Russian oil tanker and a naval vessel, threatening a key export route for Russian commodities through the Black Sea.

Top wheat shipper Russia moves most of its grain through the waterway and is in the midst of a second bumper harvest, making this a crucial time for getting crops to world markets. 

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“The risk in the Black Sea is increasing by the day and any threat to Russian exports is much more potent than a threat to the Ukrainian export corridor,” said Ole Houe, chief executive officer of broker and adviser IKON Commodities.

Futures in Chicago climbed as much as 3.4% to $6.545 a bushel on Monday before trading at $6.455 by 11:04 a.m. in Sydney. Prices closed 1% higher on Friday, paring most of an intraday 4.3% gain after the Ukraine attack on the Russian naval vessel. Traffic at Novorossiysk port was halted for several hours.

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Kyiv's decision to take the war to Russia in the Black Sea follows Vladimir Putin's July 17 withdrawal from a United Nations-brokered grain deal and a concerted missile campaign against Ukrainian ports. Ukraine's crop exports have been severely reduced as a result, while Russia's have been unaffected.

The Black Sea route also accounts for 15% to 20% of the oil that Russia sells daily on global markets and is also a major transit corridor for Kazakh crude.

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Wheat futures are still down almost 20% this year on prospects for bumper harvests from key exporters and a still-large buffer of global stockpiles.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

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