CropGPT - Maize - Week 12
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About this listen
This episode reviews the global maize market as of March 22, 2026,
- A key theme is the contrast between symbolic market openings and large-scale established trade. Kyrgyzstan’s first maize export shipment to China, a modest 25 tons under a new phytosanitary agreement, marks an important diplomatic and commercial step for its agricultural sector. However, the volume is negligible when compared with China’s projected import requirement of 8 million tons for the 2025-26 marketing year, so the immediate impact on the global maize market is minimal.
- The United States remains a major force in the market, with export commitments reaching 66.513 million metric tons by mid-March 2026, up 32 percent from a year earlier. Strong demand from Mexico, Japan, and Colombia is supporting this pace. At the same time, rising fertilizer and operating costs could reduce planted area in the 2026-27 cycle, raising the possibility that the market could shift from more comfortable supply conditions toward tighter fundamentals later on.
- Mexico is presented as a market under growing import dependence. Production is expected to decline to 24.5 million tons in 2026-27, while imports are projected to exceed domestic output. Oversupply in white maize, weaker farm gate prices, and strong livestock feed demand are all contributing to this change, with feed use estimated at 52.5 million tons. The episode suggests that Mexico’s domestic imbalance is making it increasingly reliant on foreign maize to meet consumption needs.
- India and Brazil round out the global picture. India’s maize export forecast has been revised to 650,000 tons, helped by competitive pricing and ethanol policy changes that favor rice over maize, making more maize available for export. Brazil, despite a slight production dip in 2025-26 due to a shortened sowing window affecting yields, is still expected to produce 138.27 million tons. With strong domestic demand from both feed and ethanol, Brazil’s ability to balance internal consumption with exports will remain central to its role in the global maize trade.
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