All posts by mickeybarb@charter.net

Urea

U.S. Gulf:

Granular urea barges moved lower following early-week trading at $885/st FOB NOLA, sources said. Tons for April loading were seen softening to $835-$860/st FOB on April 5, followed by a further drop to $780-$800/st FOB on April 6. Players noted multiple barges trading at $740/st FOB on April 7, leaving values in a wide $740-$885/st FOB range for the week.

Sources noted reduced demand stemming from a burst of cold, wet weather in the Midwest as largely responsible for the falling values, while also pointing to USDA’s reduced corn acreage estimate.

“(Sellers) can keep putting out lower numbers, but no one needs it and no one is buying.” said one source. “(The market) doesn’t feel heavy, it just feels nervous.”

Eastern Cornbelt:

Fueled by softening NOLA barge values, the urea market in the Eastern Cornbelt fell from highs in the $915-$935/st FOB range at the start of the week to lows in the mid-$800s/st FOB by April 7, depending on location.

Sources reported the Cincinnati, Ohio, market at $900-$935/st FOB for the week, down from the prior week’s $950-$960/st FOB range.

Western Cornbelt:

Urea pricing ranged broadly in the Western Cornbelt, depending on location and timing, but prices were down significantly from the previous week. Sources said the St. Louis, Mo., market started the week at the $910/st FOB level, but pricing slipped to $850-$860/st FOB from some suppliers as the week advanced, driven by lower NOLA barge prices.

The St. Paul, Minn., urea market fell even lower, to a reported low of $845-$855/st FOB during the week.

Southern Plains:

One source described the urea market as “in a state of confusion” in early April, due both to ongoing supply concerns, the worsening drought, and volatile NOLA barge pricing. “No buyer (trader, dealer, farmer) wants to own anything until it’s going to hit the ground,” he said. “If demand hits the fan, most sellers will empty fast and be waiting on product to arrive. There’s a real catch-22 going on now.”

While the Houston, Texas, urea market was holding at the $870/st FOB mark at midweek, the Catoosa/Inola, Okla., urea market reportedly fell from $865-$880/st FOB earlier in the week to $835-$850/st FOB by April 7, down significantly from the $910-$920/st FOB levels reported late the previous week.

South Central:

Fueled by softer NOLA barge prices, the granular urea market ranged broadly in the South Central region, depending on location and time of the week.

While sources quoted the high end of the range at $910-$920/st FOB Memphis, Tenn., and $945/st FOB Convent, La., at the beginning of the week, prices down to $840/st FOB Shreveport, La., and $845/st FOB Little Rock, Ark., were confirmed as the week progressed.

Southeast:

Urea prices in the Southeast firmed to $1,000-$1,025/st FOB, with the low reported at Savannah, Ga., and the high confirmed at Wilmington, N.C., and Charleston, S.C. Sources said urea supplies at Norfolk, Va., and Brunswick, Ga., were tapped out at midweek.

India:

Sources said the final paperwork was being done to allow IPL to call a urea tender soon. Part of the delay might have been related to the Indian government working out a ruble-rupee exchange program that would allow for Russian product to be offered in the tender.

Sources said pricing speculation for the tender was lower this week than last week. Traders speculated that offers in the tender could be at $880-$900/mt CFR, down from the nearly $1,100/mt CFR that sources discussed at the end of March.

Even if India is able to work out a fiscal exchange program that bypasses the American and European banks – and thereby the sanctions against Russia – sources still wonder how the urea will be delivered. The Ukrainian ports are closed, and the entire Black Sea is designated a war zone by insurance companies. Shipping from Russian Baltic ports would increase freight rates that could make the Russian product too expensive.

Black Sea:

The Ukrainian ports remain closed because of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The inability to move any cargo out of the major ports in the upper Black Sea has negated any efforts to nail down a secure price for urea from the area.

While some cargo might be able to be shipped from Russian ports in the far eastern portion of the Black Sea, sources said because the entire Black Sea is listed as a war zone, insurance companies are hesitant to issue protection for any vessels entering the area.

Sources said there are discussions about what prices might be if the ports were open and if the war ended, but without any actual deals, sources said this is just speculation.

Turkish January-February 2022 urea imports were reported at 338,000 mt by Trade Data Monitor, a 35.5 percent drop from the 517,000 mt imported during the same period last year.

Suppliers for the first two months of the year were Oman with 165,000 mt, Egypt with 63,000 mt, Iran with 46,000 mt, and Turkmenistan with 39,000 mt.February 2022 imports were at 166,000 mt, down 38 percent from February 2021 imports of 270,000 mt.

Indonesia:

Pupuk Holdings closed a urea tender on April 6. The company was offering 30,000-45,000 mt of Kaltim granular urea and 20,000-45,000 mt of Pusri prilled urea.In the end, Pupuk scrapped the tender because bids did not reach the undisclosed levels desired.

Reportedly, the bids were at $890-$895/mt FOB for the granular and $780/mt FOB for the prilled. Sources said Pupuk was looking for a price in the mid-$940s/mt FOB for the granular and $928/mt for the prilled.

Sources said Pupuk went into talks with the bidding companies to try to work out a better deal for the producers. Reportedly, a separate deal was done for a 45,000 mt cargo of granular urea at $945/mt FOB. Sources said Amber walked away with the tonnage.

Indonesian urea exports for January-February 2022 were reported at 5,600 mt by Trade Data Monitor, down 96 percent from the 162,000 mt exported during the same period in 2021. The limited exports were expected, said sources. The Indonesian government held back issuing export permits until February and applied pressure on the producers to first service the domestic market before considering exports.

The emphasis on the domestic market also showed up in the February exports, which were reported at 2,000 mt against February 2021 exports of 71,000 mt.

Thailand:

Imports of urea for January-February 2022 were reported at 111,000 mt by Trade Data Monitor, down 55 percent from the 245,000 mt imported during the same period in 2021. February 2022 imports were reported at 80,000 mt, down 57 percent from the 187,000 mt imported in February 2021.

Middle East:

No new spot deals came out of the Arab Gulf, leaving only older contracted tons – at formula-based prices – to represent the movement of urea out of the area. Sources said the shift this week toward softer prices could mean discussions might begin to occur under the last-done price of $1,000/mt FOB.

If the rumors of pricing in the upcoming Indian tender hold, the netback to the Arab Gulf would be around $855-$865/mt FOB.

Egyptian producers are remaining quiet as traders and end users try to figure out where the market is heading. With reports of softer prices, the producers have an extra incentive to stay quiet and try to keep prices in the $1,100s/mt FOB.

Iranian exports of urea for January-February 2022 were reported at 423,000 mt by Trade Data Monitor, a marginal drop from the 469,000 mt exported during the same period in 2021. Turkey and Oman took the bulk of the shipments in 2022 at 162,000 mt and 100,000 mt, respectively.

February 2022 exports were reported at 142,000 mt, up 29 percent from the 110,000 mt exported in February 2021. The top destination in February 2022 was Nigeria with 66,000 mt, followed by Turkey with 26,000 mt, Ukraine with 22,000 mt, and Oman with 17,000 mt.

China:

Limits on exports may extend into July 2022. Sources said the formal restrictions might still be lifted on June 1, but a government mandated “summer fertilizer program” with reserves of 1 million mt may keep tonnage out of the global market longer than previously expected.

In addition to the emphasis on building strong domestic reserves, sources said heavy-handed COVID restrictions could also limit vessel arrivals at ports to ship out whatever tons might be available. Likewise, COVID-related shutdowns in major industrial areas could also cut back on production, leaving fewer excess tons after satisfying the domestic needs.

For now, the lack of any meaningful tonnage and the absence of any other active urea market to use as a basis for calculation makes determining urea pricing out of China nearly impossible.

Brazil:

The general sense of softening urea prices hit the Brazilian import market. Sources pegged the price at $950-$1,000/mt CFR, a drop of about $50/mt from last week.

Sources said buyers in the country were pushing back against the ever-higher prices. Their lack of interest in buying material, combined with the global price trend, helped push prices down at the ports.

Rondonopolis remained stable at $1,000-$1,260/mt FOB ex-warehouse on limited activity. Sources said buyers were already hesitant to make any long-term commitments for product, preferring to take just what limited tonnage they needed at the time.

This past week, however, even the short-term buyers were holding back, leaving very few deals upon which to base market trends for the week.

UAN

U.S. Gulf:

NOLA UAN barge pricing was reported in the $620-$630/st ($19.38-$19.69/unit) FOB range, steady from the prior report.

The most recent East Coast vessel price ideas continued at $725-$735/mt CFR.

Eastern Cornbelt:

UAN-32 prices bumped up $10/st at some locations at the start of the week, with new postings reported at $660/st ($20.63/unit) FOB Mount Vernon, Ind., $665/st ($20.78/unit) FOB Cincinnati, and $670/st ($20.94/unit) FOB Peru, Ill., and Terre Haute, Ind.

The UAN-28 market was pegged at $590-$595/st ($21.07-$21.25/unit) FOB on a spot basis in Ohio.

Western Cornbelt:

The UAN-32 market in the Western Cornbelt was pegged at $650-$660/st ($20.31-$20.63/unit) FOB in early April.

Southern Plains:

UAN-32 pricing out of regional production points was quoted at a firm $640-$650/st ($20.00-$20.31/unit) FOB in the Southern Plains, with the low at Woodward and Verdigris.

South Central:

The UAN-32 market was pegged at $640-$660/st ($20.00-$20.63/unit) FOB terminals in the South Central region, up from $620-$650/st at last report, depending on location.

Southeast:

Port terminal pricing for UAN-32 in the Southeast was up, with sources quoting new levels at $640/st ($20.00/unit) FOB Savannah, $660/st ($20.63/unit) FOB Augusta, Ga., and $675/st ($21.09/unit) FOB Norfolk, Wilmington, and Charleston.

Ammonium Nitrate

Western Cornbelt:

Ammonium nitrate pricing in the Western Cornbelt was quoted at $780-$800/st FOB in early April.

Southern Plains:

The ammonium nitrate market was pegged at $765-$775/st FOB terminals in Oklahoma.

South Central:

The ammonium nitrate market was quoted at $750-$800/st FOB in the South Central region, with the low in Arkansas and the high reported in Kentucky.

Ammonium Sulfate

U.S. Gulf:

Snug nearby supply supported ammonium sulfate barge pricing at $675-$695/st FOB NOLA, sources said, unmoved from week-ago levels.

Eastern Cornbelt:

The granular ammonium sulfate market jumped to $715-$760/st FOB in the Eastern Cornbelt, depending on location.

AdvanSix announced a $50/st increase for ammonium sulfate on April 1, with new granular postings in Illinois and Wisconsin firming to $740-$745/st FOB and mid-grade moving to $680/st FOB. The company’s rail-DEL postings in Illinois and Wisconsin jumped to $750/st for granular and $690/st for mid-grade.

Western Cornbelt:

The ammonium sulfate market was pegged at $710-$740/st FOB in the Western Cornbelt, up another $15-$20/st from last report, with the low confirmed at St. Louis.

AdvanSix’s April 1 ammonium sulfate postings included $755/st FOB Sioux City, Iowa, with rail-DEL tons in Iowa and Minnesota posted at $750/st for granular and $690/st for mid-grade.

Southern Plains:

Granular ammonium sulfate pricing jumped to $700/st FOB Catoosa/Inola, up $35/st from last report. The Houston market covered a broad range at $580-$650/st FOB in early April.

South Central:

Ammonium sulfate prices were up in the South Central region, stretching from a low of $685-$690/st FOB Memphis to a high of $730/st FOB Shreveport and Little Rock.

Southeast:

Effective April 1, ammonium sulfate postings from AdvanSix FOB Hopewell, Va., firmed to $670/st for granular, $630/st for mid-grade, and $610/st for standard, up from the company’s last postings of $620/st for granular, $590/st for mid-grade, and $570/st for standard on March 14.

Delivered ammonium sulfate pricing in the Florida market was quoted at $635/st for standard and $735/st FOB for granular, up $50/st from last report.

China:

Prices out of China from standard caprolactam-grade amsul remained at $390-$400/mt FOB. A small cargo of compacted amsul was sold at $435-$445/mt FOB.Buyers continue to look to amsul as a substitute for urea. The attraction is not only the cheaper price, but also the fact that exports from China have not been restricted in the same way as urea.

Thailand:

Imports of ammonium sulfate in Thailand showed a sharp drop. January-February 2022 imports were reported by Trade Data Monitor at 7,000 mt, down from 31,000 mt imported during the same period in 2021.

February 2022 imports were reported at 5,500 mt, up from the 2,600 mt imported in February 2021. China supplied 4,700 mt of the February 2022 tonnage.

Turkey:

Imports of ammonium sulfate for January-February 2022 were reported at 301,000 mt by Trade Data Monitor, more than double the 147,000 mt imported during the same period of 2021.February 2022 imports were reported at 152,000 mt, also a dramatic rise from the 85,000 mt imported in February 2021.

Brazil:

Brazilian sources reported no shift in pricing for granular amsul at $500-$505/mt CFR. Asian sources, however, reported a sale of 3,000 mt to a Brazilian buyer with a price topping off at $495/mt CFR. Both groups agreed the top price of $505/mt CFR is probably related to older deals, and that the price seems to be softening.

Pricing in Rondonopolis remained stable at $700/mt FOB ex-warehouse.

DAP/MAP

Central Florida:

Central Florida DAP truck pricing was posted at $945/st FOB, steady from one week earlier. Players quoted truck-loaded MAP even with DAP at $945/st FOB, also unmoved from the prior report.

MAP trucks loading from North Florida were valued at $1,025/st FOB, unchanged from one week earlier.

U.S. Gulf:

Sources noted NOLA DAP and MAP barge prices taking a step back from week-ago highs.

Reduced demand stemming from cold, wet weather conditions in the Midwest saw the DAP low soften to $940/st FOB, falling from the prior $960/st FOB bottom. Early-week trading of domestically-produced product was quoted at $970/st FOB, down $40/st from the week-ago top $1,010/st FOB.

Players noted a fresh MAP floor at $970/st FOB, rising from $960/st FOB the week before. Pricing for the current period was described at a $990/st FOB high, off $25/st from the week-ago $1,015/st FOB.

Price guidance for domestically produced tons loading from NOLA in the second quarter was indicated at $970/st FOB for both DAP and MAP.

The NOLA barge DAP market was reported in the $940-$970/st FOB range for the week, softening from $960-$1,010/st FOB in the prior report. MAP barges were quoted at $970-$990/st FOB for the week, a shift from $960-$1,015/st FOB at last report.

U.S. Export:

No new business was reported on the week’s U.S. Gulf phosphate export market. The last reported spot deals included a DAP and MAP cargo comprised of roughly 5,000 mt each, with pricing quoted at $1,240/mt FOB. Indications for the next round of business were previously observed at $1,250/mt FOB.

Eastern Cornbelt:

DAP pricing in the Eastern Cornbelt remained at $1,000-$1,030/st FOB regional terminals, with the Cincinnati market pegged at $1,000-$1,025/st FOB. MAP was reported in the $990-$1,025/st FOB range in early April, with the Cincinnati market quoted at $990-$1,010/st FOB.

Western Cornbelt:

The DAP market was quoted at $995-$1,025/st FOB in the Western Cornbelt, down $5/st from the prior week, with the St. Louis market reported at the lower end of the range. MAP pricing fell in the $1,000-$1,030/st FOB range, with the St. Louis market pegged at $1,000-$1,025/st FOB.

The St. Paul phosphate market was quoted at $1,000-$1,030/st FOB for DAP, with reports of MAP pricing ranging broadly at $1,000-$1,065/st FOB in early April.

Southern Plains:

DAP pricing was quoted at $1,005-$1,025/st FOB Catoosa/Inola, depending on supplier, with the Houston market pegged firmly at the $1,050/st FOB level at midweek. The MAP market was reported at $1,010-$1,020/st FOB Catoosa/Inola and up to $1,060/st FOB Houston.

South Central:

DAP warehouse prices were quoted at $1,005-$1,015/st FOB in the South Central region in early April.

Southeast:

Nutrien’s postings for DAP and MAP remained at $1,025/st FOB Aurora, N.C., up $25/st from late March, with MAP pricing at White Springs, Fla., also quoted at the $1,025/st FOB level for new offers.

Saudi Arabia:

Phosphates shipping from Saudi Arabia were heard firming to the $1,035-$1,190/mt FOB range, rising from the prior week’s $950-$1,175/mt FOB.

China:

Some DAP under old contracts is still allowed to move out of China, sources said, but the Chinese customs offices are examining closely all requests for exemptions to the export restrictions.

A sale of Ma’aden DAP to Pakistan at $1,025/mt CFR offered number crunchers an opportunity to calculate what a possible price out of China might be. Observers said a China-equivalent netback could be $990-$995/mt FOB. One observer said seeing a similar deal with India could help move the estimated Chinese price.

Pakistan:

A DAP sale of 25,000 mt from Ma’aden to Endgro for early May loading was reported at $1,025/mt CFR. Reportedly, a second cargo for the same size and price was also secured for mid-May loading.

India:

No new spot DAP deals were reported into India. Buyers continue to receive limited cargoes from China under older contracts that reflect prices from October 2021 instead of the current hot market.

Brazil:

Prices moved up for MAP in Brazil as sources for the product shrink. With Russia and China out of the global phosphate market, Brazil has to depend increasingly on Morocco and Saudi Arabia. The two producers are pushing for higher prices, with buyers left little recourse. Sources put the price at $1,300-$1,350/mt CFR.

The upward pressure on prices was also felt in Rondonopolis, where sources put the price at $1,488-$1,515/mt FOB ex-warehouse.

TSP

U.S. Gulf:

Last-done NOLA TSP trades continued at $825-$850/st FOB, sources said. Some described thin remaining supply at those price points, however, predicting a possible move into the $870s/st FOB in the next round of business.

Western Cornbelt:

The TSP market was reported at $865-$895/st FOB in the Western Cornbelt, depending on location.

South Central:

TSP pricing in the South Central region reportedly firmed to $865-$885/st FOB, up $15-$20/st from last report. The low end of the range was reported at Memphis with the high at Little Rock.

Phosphate Rock

Tunisia:

Tunisia’s production of phosphate rock reached 1.13 million mt in the first quarter, the TAP news agency reported this week, citing state-owned Compagnie des Phosphates de Gafsa (CPG).

The first-quarter output was a nearly 750,000 mt increase over the same year-ago period, and was achieved despite a shutdown of the Redayef mine and disruptions at the Om Larayes mine since the beginning of this year, according to the report.

Phosphoric Acid

Eastern Cornbelt:

April postings for phos acid were quoted at the $17.50/unit rail-DEL level in the Eastern Cornbelt, up $1.00/unit from March.

Western Cornbelt:

Phos acid prices firmed to $17.50/unit rail-DEL in the Western Cornbelt on April 1, up from $16.50/unit in March.

Southern Plains:

April pricing for phos acid was quoted at $17.50/unit rail-DEL in the Southern Plains, up from $16.50/unit in March.

India:

India phosphoric acid contracts were quoted at $1,530/mt P2O5 CFR for the current quarter. The price was valid on tons loading from both Morocco and North America.

Ammonium Polyphosphate

Eastern Cornbelt:

The 10-34-0 market was pegged at $900-$910/st FOB in the Eastern Cornbelt in early April.

Western Cornbelt:

Sources reported limited 10-34-0 offers in the $900-$910/st FOB range in the Western Cornbelt.

Southern Plains:

The 10-34-0 market was quoted at the $880-$890/st FOB level for limited offers in the Southern Plains, with the high confirmed in Kansas. No current 11-37-0 offers were reported in the region in early April.

Muriate of Potash

U.S. Gulf:

NOLA potash barges were unchanged at $775-$830/st FOB for the week, sources said. Tons slated for export reflected the upper end of the spread.

Eastern Cornbelt:

Potash pricing in the Eastern Cornbelt was reported at $805-$830/st FOB during the week, depending on location, with the Cincinnati market quoted at $805-$815/st FOB.

Western Cornbelt:

Potash pricing was quoted at $795-$830/st FOB in the Western Cornbelt, depending in location, with the St. Louis market pegged in the $795-$810/st FOB range for the week. The St. Paul potash market was reported in the $790-$820/st FOB range in early April.

Southern Plains:

The Catoosa/Inola potash market was quoted at $800-$835/st FOB, with Houston pricing reported as high as $875/st FOB at midweek. Intrepid announced a $50/st increase on April 1, with new postings FOB Carlsbad, N.M., firming to $855/st for 60 percent white granular and $875/st FOB for 62 percent white standard.

South Central:

The potash market firmed to $810-$835/st FOB in the South Central region, up $15/st from last report, with the low confirmed at Memphis and the high at Shreveport.

Southeast:

Potash pricing was pegged at $760-$800/st FOB port terminals in the Southeast, with the high reflecting the more common level in early April.

India:

RCF re-tendered on April 1 for 105,000 mt of white/pink standard potash for delivery in three 35,000 mt lots in April, May, and June to MBPT HB. The tender closes on April 11.

The buyer first closed a tender for this volume on Jan. 28, but subsequently re-issued the tender more than once. Sources said offers into the tenders were few and far between, hence the re-tendering.

Like National Fertilizers Ltd. (NFL) last week, RCF has included a clause in this latest tender, stating euros, Indian rupees, and Russian rubles, in addition to U.S. dollars, would all be acceptable for offers into the tender.

NFL last week extended its Request for Proposals (RFP) for entering into a long-term agreement/MOU with potash producers for the supply of potash during FY2022/23 (GM April 1, p. 14). The RFP, first issued on Feb. 17 (GM Feb. 18, p. 15), originally had been due to close on March 21.

NFL last week also included a new clause in the RFP, stating that while the preferred currency of the purchase order (PO) will be U.S. dollars, NFL would also issue the PO in euros, rubles, or Indian rupees if sellers requested. The buyer is looking for firm quantities of 200,000 mt of standard pink/red potash.

Indonesia:

There has been no news of any awards in PT Pupuk Indonesia’s tender for the purchase of 300,000-400,000 mt of standard potash. Sources said offers into the tender were north of $900/mt CFR. The buyer is looking for the volumes to be shipped starting in the current quarter and running to the end of calendar 2022.

Thailand:

Imports of MOP for January and February 2022 were drastically down from the same period in 2021. The 2022 imports were reported at 7,000 mt by Trade Data Monitor, against 31,000 mt for the same period in 2021.

February 2022 imports were reported at 5,500, almost doubling the February 2021 imports of 2,600 mt.

Brazil:

The price of MOP tightened toward the upper end of the range as concerns grow about access to the product. Sources put the price at $1,150-$1,250/mt CFR.

Media reports said the Brazilian government is looking for exemptions from the U.S.-initiated sanctions against Belarus and the U.S.-E.U. sanctions against Russia. Industry watchers said Brazil is looking at using alternate currencies, such as the Chinese yuan, to pay for the potash they need to work out barter arrangements similar to those for Iranian urea.

The concern of being caught short of product was also felt in Rondonopolis. Prices inland were reported at $1,250-$1,398/mt FOB ex-warehouse.