Brazil’s Soy Boom Faces Tight Margins
BrazilTue Mar 17 2026
The biggest soybean crop ever is on the way for Brazil, but farmers are looking at thinner profits. The next harvest could hit about 6. 5 billion bushels, up a few percent from last year, thanks to more acres being planted and good yields in the Center‑West. Yet costs for growers have climbed sharply: fertilizer prices spiked after Russia invaded Ukraine, and the U. S. dollar’s rise made imports more expensive for Brazil, which spends most of its fertilizer abroad. At the same time, soybean prices have become less predictable; they surged during the pandemic and war but have since eased.
Farmers’ earnings per acre, which had topped $400 in the early 2020s, are now expected to drop to around $10, a level unseen in nearly twenty years. A temporary boost came when China cut U. S. soybean imports, lifting port premiums for Brazilian exports and helping keep margins from going negative. Even so, the tighter economics may slow Brazil’s historic trend of adding more farmland for soy. If fewer acres are planted, global supply growth could slow, easing pressure on U. S. soybean prices and changing trade dynamics.