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World food prices rebound in February, United Nations’ FAO says

By Thomson Reuters Mar 6, 2026 | 3:56 AM

PARIS, March 6 (Reuters) – World food prices rose in February after falling for five straight months, as higher cereal, meat and most vegetable oil prices outweighed declines in cheese and sugar, the ​United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization said on Friday.

The FAO ‌Food Price Index, which tracks monthly changes in a basket of internationally traded food commodities, averaged 125.3 points in February, up from a revised 124.2 in January.

The index was still 1% below its value a year earlier and nearly 22% below its March ‌2022 ​peak, reached after the start of the war ⁠in Ukraine.

Average cereal prices increased ⁠1.1% from the previous month, with wheat prices rising 1.8% due to weather risks in Europe and the United States as well as continuing logistical disruptions within the Russian Federation and the wider Black Sea ​region. They were still 3.5% below their level of a year earlier.

Rice prices edged up 0.4%, supported by sustained demand for basmati and ⁠Japonica varieties.

Vegetable oil prices climbed 3.3%, reaching ⁠their highest level since June 2022. Palm oil prices increased ​due to strong global demand and lower output in Southeast Asia, while soyoil ​prices rose on expected policy support for biofuel in the ‌U.S.

Meat prices rose 0.8% from January, led by record prices for sheep meat and stronger demand for beef in the U.S. and China.

Dairy prices fell 1.2%, extending a months-long decline, mainly due to lower cheese prices in ⁠the European Union. However, skimmed and whole milk powder and butter prices increased on strong demand amid tight supply in key exporters.

Sugar prices dropped 4.1% to ⁠their lowest since October ‌2020, reflecting expectations of ample global supply, including record ⁠output in the United States.

In a separate report, the ​FAO slightly ‌raised its 2025 global cereal production forecast to ​a record 3.029 ⁠billion metric tons, reflecting minor adjustments, mainly to maize and rice estimates. It would be 5.6% higher year-on-year.

World cereal stocks by the close of the 2026 season are also set to rise, with the global stocks-to-use ratio seen at a comfortable 31.9%.

(Reporting by Sybille de La Hamaide; Editing by Alexandra Hudson ​and Kevin Liffey)