Ukraine has spent four years trying to keep its grain machine going through a war.
Going into next season, that machine is set to ship one of its biggest crops in years. The size of the jump could ease pressure on global food prices.
The Forecast Behind The Numbers
The Ukrainian Grains Association laid out its 2026/27 outlook this week at the GrainCom Conference in Geneva. The numbers point to a big step up.
Corn output is set to climb to 32.6 million metric tons next season. That's up from 31.3 million this year.
Exports follow the same path. The group sees 26 million tons going out the door, versus 22 million this season. Wheat tells a like story.
The harvest looks set for 22 to 23 million tons. Wheat exports could rise to 16 million tons.
Total grain output is on track for 82.4 million tons. Exports could hit 49.3 million, up from 43 million this season.
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Why This Year Sets Up Next Year
There's a wrinkle that makes the forecast bigger than it looks.
UGA boss Nikolay Gorbachov said Ukraine's current shipments are running slow. That sounds bad. It isn't - at least not for next season.
The slower the pace now, the more stock piles up for 2026/27. Stocks build up while ports work through orders. Then those stocks roll over into next year's tally.
Gorbachov also runs the Ukraine arm of French grain firm Soufflet. He shared the forecast at the GrainCom Conference. The room had a lot of buyers in it.
Investors who care about food prices have been watching Ukraine's harvests since the 2022 invasion. The country is still the world's top grain seller.
When its shipments move, corn and wheat prices on US futures markets move with them. The supply story matters for feed costs, ethanol prices, and the cereal aisle.
It also matters for poorer nations in the Middle East and North Africa. Many of them lean on Ukraine wheat to keep bread cheap and tables full.
What To Watch
The US Department of Agriculture's own forecast lines up with Ukraine's call. It sees a 26% jump in Ukrainian corn exports next season on what it called good weather and better-than-average yields.
Two things to track from here. The first is the planting pace through spring. The second is whether Black Sea shipping lanes stay open as the war drags on.
A bigger crop only counts if it can get to global ports. Big crop, more stocks, easy shipping - that's the bull case for global grain supply into next year.
If any one of those three breaks down, the forecast slides fast.
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