Soybeans, Corn, Wheat: Why Grain Markets Will Remain Strong In 2022

 | Dec 31, 2021 11:40

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com 

  • Multi-year highs for soybeans, corn, and wheat in 2021
  • Chinese demand and the soybean-corn ratio support the oilseed
  • Energy prices and policy support corn
  • Geopolitics support wheat
  • Weather is critical, but many signs point higher for the grains and oilseeds in 2022

Agricultural commodities feed the world. The United States is the world’s leading producer and exporter of soybeans and corn and a leading exporter of wheat. Oilseeds and grains are critical ingredients in food and biofuel. Food is essential, and governments worldwide are responsible for providing security and nutrition to their citizens. When people go hungry, governments quickly lose power.

In 2021, rising inflationary pressures increased the input costs for farmers and producers that grow agricultural products. Escalating energy, fertilizer, equipment, and other input costs have pushed oilseed and grain prices higher. Moreover, weather and supply chain issues have caused prices to accelerate to the highest levels in years. As we head into 2022, input costs remain sky-high. The trend in soybean, corn, and wheat futures markets remains higher at the end of 2021.

Each year is always a new adventure for the commodities that feed people. The weather across the critical growing areas worldwide is invariably a primary factor determining the path of least resistance of prices. Meanwhile, demographics point to rising demand.

Each quarter the world adds around twenty million more mouths to feed. Therefore, food demand was higher in 2021 than 2020 and will increase in 2022. At the turn of this century, there were approximately six billion people in the world. At the end of 2021, the number stands at over 7.866 billion, an over 31% increase over the past twenty-one years. Producers must grow more crops each year to keep pace with the population growth.  

I expect we will see a continuation of higher lows and higher highs in the grain and oilseed markets in 2022.

h2 Multi-year highs for soybeans, corn, and wheat in 2021/h2

Nearby CBOT soybean futures reached the highest price since 2012 in May 2021 before correcting.