×

Nutrien posts higher profit as prices rise, flags tight nitrogen supply

By Thomson Reuters May 6, 2026 | 4:22 PM

May 6 (Reuters) – Canada’s Nutrien reported a rise in first-quarter profit on Wednesday, benefiting from higher sales and prices across its fertilizer segments, with the world’s top potash ​producer also flagging tighter nitrogen market conditions going forward.

Fertilizer ‌prices rose during the quarter, led by a surge in nitrogen rates as global supplies tightened due to the Middle East conflict, while phosphate prices were broadly higher and potash held relatively firm, supporting margins for producers ‌such ​as Nutrien.

The company expects the global nitrogen ⁠market to be impacted for ⁠the rest of the year by the uneven restoration of trade flows and gradual resumption of nitrogen production in some facilities, as well as uncertainty around Chinese urea exports and ​Indian urea imports.

“We anticipate relatively tight potash fundamentals throughout 2026, with demand trends expected to test existing global operating and ⁠supply chain capabilities,” the company said.

Net ⁠sales across Nutrien’s fertilizer segments rose during the first ​quarter, supported by stronger prices. Potash net sales rose 24% to $926 ​million driven by record volumes, while nitrogen climbed 15% ‌to $1.01 billion and phosphates gained 35% at $485 million.

However, adjusted core profit in the phosphates segment fell 7% to $57 million due to higher sulfur input costs.

Nutrien is progressing as planned with the review ⁠of strategic alternatives for its phosphates business, the Trinidad nitrogen facility and Brazilian retail business, the fertilizer company said.

Nutrien launched a strategic review of ⁠its phosphate business ‌in November to simplify its portfolio. In October, ⁠it began a controlled shutdown of its ​Trinidad nitrogen ‌operations due to gas supply constraints and port ​access issues ⁠that weighed on free cash flow.

The Saskatoon, Canada-based firm reported a net income of $139 million, or 27 cents per share, for the three months ended March 31, up from $19 million, or 2 cents per share, a year earlier.

(Reporting by Sumit Saha in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Jonathan Ananda)