Rice feeds more than half the world.
It just broke through a price level it has not seen in nearly a year, with three forces all pushing the same way.
The Supply Side Is Tighter
The USDA's first 2026/27 outlook puts US rice output at 175.2 million bags. That is a drop of more than 31 million from last year.
It is a 15% cut in one of the world's biggest rice growers.
US farmers planted 493,000 fewer acres of rice for the 2026/27 crop. That is a 17% drop in harvested area. A small bump in yields per acre cannot close the gap.
World milled rice output is set to drop 5 million tons to 537.8 million tons. That is the first global drop since 2015/16.
At the same time, world use is on track for a record 541.4 million tons. Demand will run ahead of supply by about 3.6 million tons. That pulls down end-of-year stocks.
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The Cost To Grow It Is Up Too
Rice needs a lot of fertilizer. Fertilizer prices are climbing.
The Iran conflict has lifted insurance, freight, and fuel costs. All of those feed into the cost of growing and shipping rice.
The result: even growers in places with no drought are seeing tighter margins.
Higher input costs, tighter supply, and record demand have lifted rice prices about 16.7% in the past month, bringing the 12-month gain to 1.4%.
Who Sells The Most Rice
India is the world's top rice seller. It ships about 40% of global rice trade.
Vietnam comes second, with Thailand in third. The three together cover most of the world's traded rice.
India already curbs exports of some rice types. Those curbs keep prices low at home. Other top growers may do the same if prices keep rising.
What Investors Are Watching
Three signals will set where rice goes next:
- USDA planted acreage updates. Acres drive the production ceiling for the 2026/27 crop.
- Monsoon rains across India, Vietnam, and Thailand. Those are the world's top three rice exporters.
- Trade moves from big importers. Rice is politically sensitive. Countries hoard fast when prices climb.
Any further move from a top exporter, or stockpiling from a big importer, would add to the rally.
The next USDA WASDE report is the next big catalyst. WASDE is the monthly crop report from the US farm agency.
A staple crop is moving in price. That tends to show up in food bills before it shows up in markets.
For US growers, the 17% drop in planted area is the biggest issue. They blame low rice prices in early 2025 for the cut. Many switched to soy and corn instead.
Now those swap crops are doing the same dance higher.
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