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Mosaic Loses $258 Million on Sulfur Shortage From Iran War

Published Jun 16, 2026
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Summary:
  • Mosaic posted a $258 million loss for the quarter ended in March as sulfur costs consumed roughly half the $800-per-ton sale price of phosphate fertilizer.
  • Disruptions to Gulf shipping through the Strait of Hormuz cut tradable sulfur supply, and an ag economist says the price premium will not clear until 2028 at the earliest.
  • Mosaic shares are down about 18% this year as the company absorbs costs it cannot pass on to corn, soy, and wheat farmers already facing thin margins.

The Iran war ended last weekend, but fertilizer prices didn't get the memo.

Mosaic, one of the world's largest fertilizer makers, just had a $258 million loss for its quarter that ended in March. The reason is one ingredient: sulfur.

Sulfur turns raw phosphate rock into a form crops can use. A large share of the world's tradable supply comes from oil and gas refining in the Gulf, and about a fifth of it moves through the Strait of Hormuz - a route that's been disrupted since the war began in March.

Sulfur Eats Half The Price Of Phosphorus

Mosaic sells phosphorus fertilizer for about $800 a ton. Sulfur alone now eats about half of that - before shipping, labor, or processing.

Normally a company facing rising costs just charges more. Mosaic can't.

Row crop farmers - the corn, soy, and wheat growers who buy most of Mosaic's product - are already having a bad year as crop prices fall and margins thin out.

That leaves no room to pass on another price hike. So Mosaic is shipping product at a loss and slowing work at some of its plants.

Mosaic shares are down roughly 18% this year as costs climbed and demand softened - a sharp turn from the gains producers saw on tight global supply in prior periods. [NEEDS MANUAL VERIFICATION: original article does not reference a 2024 phosphate price spike]

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Ceasefire Reopens Shipping, Not Infrastructure

The US and Iran reached an early deal Sunday to end the war that's hit the region since March. That's good news for shipping, less good news for fertilizer.

Shawn Arita, an ag economist at North Dakota State, expects the price spike to ease once the Strait of Hormuz reopens. But the premium - the part of the price that shows rebuilt infrastructure and broken supply chains - won't clear for years.

He calls it a 2028 story, not a 2027 one. Shipping routes can reopen in months, while the energy and fertilizer plants wrecked during the war take years to rebuild.

Saudi Arabia and the UAE together account for a large share of global sulfur exports, and energy and fertilizer infrastructure across the region was damaged during the conflict. 

What To Watch

Nitrogen fertilizer is a different product from the phosphorus stuff Mosaic makes - and one that corn farmers will pay almost any price for because their yields fall apart without it.

Nitrogen makers like CF Industries and Nutrien have seen prices climb too, though their supply chains are less tied up in the Gulf.

That captive demand isn't going anywhere, which means whoever can keep producing through this supply shock has a customer base waiting on the other side. Farmers can delay equipment buys or skip land deals when times are tight, but skipping fertilizer means losing a crop.

The ceasefire ends the war. It doesn't end the fertilizer bill.

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