Corn (Maize)

Corn EWR can be traded on the EWR Market in three different types: “Domestic Corn,” “Imported Corn,” and “Popcorn.”

Corn Price

To access the charts and dataset of TMEX Agricultural Product Indexes, including corn, please click here.

How Are Corn Prices Determined?

In the production and marketing of agricultural products, product prices and the factors affecting those prices are among the most important issues. The prices of agricultural products affect the sustainability of production, farmers’ incomes, and consumers’ food expenditures.

Among agricultural products, corn is of strategic importance as a staple food source and ranks first in terms of production. Due to its cultivation area, it is a strategic product, and both its production and pricing are subject to comprehensive policies and programs.

Corn, like other agricultural products, changes hands in different markets at different prices. Price analyses reveal price fluctuations based on quality and the effects of government programs on prices. In markets, the relationships between sellers and buyers lead to a series of prices and terms of purchase and sale, and an equilibrium price is formed under supply and demand conditions. Supply and demand conditions vary depending on the season, and this is reflected in prices. In addition, storage costs affect prices. There is a relationship between product quality and price, given the benefits that product standardization and grading provide to consumers.

Considering food safety and climate change issues, regulatory authorities also play an important role in price formation in the corn market through corn purchases or price regulations due to the role corn plays in food safety and the possible consequences of climate change. In our country, the regulatory role in trade is performed by the Turkish Grain Board.

The fundamental factors determining “barley” prices under free market conditions can be listed as follows.

  1. Price changes are influenced by the following factors on the supply side.

Ordinary price trends: Prices follow a trend that is parallel to the country’s current economic conditions.

Production Cost

  • Storage extends the time of consumption by using resources so that the product can be consumed after the harvest season. Storage incurs costs due to the resources it consumes. Storage brings with it certain requirements (warehouses, cold storage, tanks, silos, etc.).
  • Transportation is another factor that affects production costs. The cost of transportation is proportional to the distance the product is transported. There are also fixed cost elements that are not dependent on the distance traveled by transportation modes such as road, rail, and sea (loading, unloading, administrative costs, etc.). For this reason, transportation costs also affect product prices.
  • The costs incurred by both transportation and storage affect the price .

Seasonality

  • From June, the start of the barley harvest season, prices may show a downward trend throughout the season as the supply in the market is expected to be high.
  • When barley stocks need to be cleared, prices are expected to fall as stocks need to be liquidated quickly.

Market Where Sales Are Made

  • Selling the product in the market where it is grown results in a relatively low price.
  • If the product is sold in a location further away from where it is grown, the price is expected to increase due to higher transportation costs.

Government Regulations

  • Considering food security and climate change issues, regulatory authorities play a significant role in barley market price formation through barley purchases or price regulations due to barley’s role in food security and the potential consequences of climate change. In our country, the regulatory role in trade is performed by the Turkish Grain Board.
  • In parallel with the harvest seasons, the Turkish Grain Board announces purchase prices for grain products. Within the same scope, the Turkish Grain Board also carries out sales transactions during the consumption phase of the products after the harvest seasons, thereby providing products to producers.
  • Production subsidies and support, along with support purchases, help reduce prices for consumers and lower costs for producers.
  • Product consumption and export support will limit price declines by absorbing production surpluses, while customs duties and other import restrictions in international trade may increase supply in the domestic market, leading to price decreases or stabilization.
  • Production restrictions and the absence of subsidies or support for production affect the price.
  • In order to stop the price of staple foods such as barley from rising above an acceptable level, the government can set a maximum price for the product and limit the upward movement of prices.

Producers’ Profit Expectations

  • Producers supply the market with a product in direct proportion to the profit they expect from it in the future. If future price expectations for barley are low, producers may refrain from producing it. A decrease in supply causes barley prices to rise.

Physical Conditions

  • Barley thrives in areas with moderate temperatures and high relative humidity. When these physical conditions can not be met due to adverse weather conditions, the supply of barley decreases. This leads to an upward movement in prices.
  • During periods of scarcity and drought, a decrease in supply leads to upward movement in prices.

Technological Conditions

  • Technological advances increase production speed, which in turn affects supply. Machines and factories that process barley enable more products to be brought to market faster thanks to technological advances. This leads to an increase in the supply of barley in the market, thereby affecting barley prices downward.

Number of Producers

  • The supply quantity increases in direct proportion to the increase in the number of producers. A decrease in the number of producers of a product results in a decrease in the supply of that product, and consequently, an increase in its price.
  1. Price changes are influenced by the following factors on the demand side.

The price of the relevant commodity

  • Corn silage, soybean meal and rapeseed meal can be considered substitute products for barley in the feed industry. Should the price of these products, which can be used as feed instead of barley, increase, demand for relatively inexpensive barley in the cattle farming sector is expected to rise, leading to an increase in barley prices within a certain period.

Population growth

  • Demographic distribution and population directly affect demand. As the population increases (through migration, rising birth rates, etc.), demand for the product also increases. Increased demand causes prices to rise. A decrease in population leads to a proportional decrease in demand for the product. Decreased demand causes prices to fall.

Future price expectations

  • Expectations that barley prices will rise in the future lead to increased demand today, as prices are expected to remain relatively low. This increase in demand is expected to push prices upward.

Standardization of the Product

  • Establishing barley product standards increases production and price efficiency, thereby leading to an increase in demand. An increase in demand for the same supply quantity causes prices to move upward.

Seasonality

  • During periods when the demand for barley increases throughout the year, prices tend to rise due to excess demand.

How Are Barley Prices Formed in the TMEX EWR Market?

The Exchange calculates volume-weighted average prices (VWAP) based on transactions occurring in the EWR Market Normal Session according to the continuous auction method, based on supply and demand. These prices are shared with the public in the Daily Bulletin published on Exchange website every day.

Barley is traded separately in classes classified according to the quality criteria of products determined by the Ministry of Trade (in sub-classes under the Barley group, distinguishing between domestic and imported). Therefore, buyers and sellers can determine order prices by taking into account quality criteria, delivery points, etc., according to the product class.

The method of continuously matching orders sent to the EWR Market Trading System at different prices in accordance with price and time priority rules is called the Multiple Price Continuous Auction Method. In this method, orders are compared with opposing orders as soon as they are sent to the system. Transactions are executed according to price and time priority. In the order of execution of orders, price is considered first; if prices are the same, time priority is then considered.

  • Price Priority: A priority rule that ensures low-priced sell orders are executed before high-priced sell orders, and high-priced buy orders are executed before low-priced buy orders.
  • Time Priority: A priority rule that ensures, in the event of price equality among entered orders, the order recorded earlier in the system is executed first.

TMEX may set a price change limit (margin) for a product (ISIN) during a session. In this case, the price of orders that can be placed during a session must be within this limit.

About Barley Prices

How Are Barley Prices Determined? 

✅ Purchase and sale orders submitted to TMEX are matched using a multi-price continuous auction method to determine transaction prices.

What Are the Types of Barley?         

✅ Barley EWR transaction prices are represented in the “Barley Index” and “Grain Index” of TMEX Agricultural Product Indices.

 

 

For the products traded in the EWR Market, please click here.