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March 2026
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Asian Rice Sellers Hit Pause As Freight Costs Rise

Higher shipping rates tied to Middle East tensions are cooling exports from India, Vietnam, and Thailand, while Bangladesh is turning to imports to tame stubbornly high domestic prices.

Finimize Newsroom

What’s going on here?

Rice buyers are pausing orders from India, Vietnam, and Thailand as shipping costs rise on Middle East tensions, while Bangladesh is easing import rules to bring domestic prices down.

What does this mean?

Freight is suddenly doing a lot of the pricing. Traders say higher shipping rates are making importers cautious, especially after recent buying left many with decent stockpiles. That’s helped push offers lower: India’s 5% broken parboiled rice slipped to about $343–$350 a metric ton and Vietnam’s to roughly $350–$355, while Thailand held nearer $365–$370 thanks to some African demand. Thailand’s traders are also looking to the end-March new crop, warning prices could climb if costs rise or output disappoints.

Why should I care?

For markets: Freight can trump fundamentals.

Rice is traded globally but priced delivered, so a jump in shipping can reshuffle which origin wins tenders even if harvests are fine. The current gap – India and Vietnam cheaper than Thailand – could narrow or widen quickly based on routes and insurance, and that can flow through to food inflation data. It also matters for companies exposed to transport and staples costs, from shipping and commodity traders to packaged-food firms.

The bigger picture: Food security is a logistics problem too.

Bangladesh’s move to boost procurement and allow more private imports shows how governments try to damp price spikes even when supplies look adequate. When geopolitics lifts freight and energy costs, countries tend to rely more on buffers, imports, and quicker policy tweaks to keep staples affordable. That’s why food inflation can stay sticky even in a good harvest year.

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Published Date: March 19, 2026

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