Key Takeaways:
- FAO Food Price Index averaged 130.3 points in June, down 0.3% from May
- Cereal prices fell 3.5% while vegetable oils rose 3.8% and meat hit a record
- El Nino risks threaten wheat in Australia, sugar in India and palm oil in Indonesia
Key Takeaways:

The FAO Food Price Index averaged 130.3 points in June, down 0.3% from May, as lower prices for cereals, sugar and dairy outweighed gains in vegetable oils and meat, the United Nations agency said.
"While the overall benchmark for international food commodity prices declined slightly in June, individual commodity markets continue to respond differently to evolving factors," Boubaker Ben-Belhassen, director of FAO's Markets and Trade division, said. "In an increasingly uncertain global environment, transparent markets, timely information and predictable global trade remain essential to advance food security."
Cereal prices led the decline, with the FAO Cereal Price Index dropping 3.5% from May. Wheat quotations fell 4.4% as rapid harvest progress and strong supply prospects in the Black Sea region outweighed concerns over crop conditions in Australia and the US. Maize prices slid 6.2%, reflecting ample supply expectations from South American exporters and weaker ethanol demand. Rice bucked the trend, rising 3.2% on stronger Asian demand for Indica varieties and weather-related production concerns. The Sugar Price Index fell 5.7%, driven by lower domestic ethanol prices in Brazil and a weaker Brazilian real, though El Nino risks in India and Thailand limited the decline. Dairy prices slipped 1.5%, with cheese recording an eleventh consecutive monthly drop as export supplies exceeded global import demand.
Vegetable oils and meat moved higher. The FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index rose 3.8%, supported by stronger mandated biofuel demand lifting palm and rapeseed oil, while soyoil prices declined. The Meat Price Index increased 0.5% to a new record high, driven by higher poultry prices after production adjustments in response to earlier oversupply, while pig and bovine meat prices fell.
El Nino Adds Uncertainty to Production Outlook
Global cereal output for 2026 is forecast at 2,983 million tonnes, the second-highest on record but 1.9% below last year's peak, according to FAO's Cereal Supply and Demand Brief. Wheat production is expected to fall 4.3% to 806.5 million tonnes, with Australian official data pointing to El Nino-driven output below the five-year average. Rice output is projected to decline 1.8% from its all-time high in 2025/26. Coarse grain production is expected to remain broadly stable, buoyed by stronger harvests in Argentina, Brazil, China and Zambia.
The global cereal stock-to-use ratio stands at 32%, largely unchanged from the prior season, indicating adequate buffer stocks. However, FAO identified 41 countries requiring external assistance for food, with 31 in Africa, as conflict and El Nino-related weather conditions constrain agricultural production.
Sugar and Palm Oil Face Weather Risk
El Nino poses the most immediate threat to sugar crops in India and Thailand and to palm oil production in Indonesia, where extreme heat could stress oil palm trees. Meteorologists expect an especially strong weather pattern this year, which could disrupt rainfall across key farming regions. Australian wheat output has already been affected, with official data showing production falling below the five-year average. Despite these risks, the Agricultural Market Information System, hosted by FAO, described agricultural markets as "generally steady," citing favorable crop conditions and ample supplies.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.