ICE Canola Midday: Nudging upward in light trading

Potential for rain on the weekend

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: June 19, 2025

By Glen Hallick

Glacier Farm Media | MarketsFarm – Intercontinental Exchange canola futures were slightly higher late Thursday morning, in light activity as the United States grain markets are closed for the Juneteenth holiday.

Tight old crop supplies and lingering uncertainty over the new crop continued to underpin canola values. However, potential rain for the Prairies this weekend could bring some relief from dry conditions.

A clearer picture of this year’s canola crop will come June 27, as Statistics Canada issues its next crop area report. In March, StatCan projected 21.6 million acres of canola to be planted in 2025/26, down 1.7 per cent from the year before.

Read Also

North American Grain and Oilseed Review: Canola clings to small upticks

By Glen Hallick, MarketsFarm Glacier Farm Media MarketsFarm – Intercontinental Exchange canola futures closed a pinch higher on Friday, after…

Canola still gleaned support from increases in European rapeseed and Malaysian palm oil. Higher crude oil prices spilled into the vegetable oils.

Reuters said China is set to acquire up 500,000 tonnes of canola meal from India in 2025/26, compared to less than 61,000 in 2024/25. That stems from China’s 100 per cent tariffs on Canadian canola meal and oil.

At mid-session Thursday, the Canadian dollar was weaker as the loonie dropped to 72.79 U.S. cents compared to Wednesday’s close of 73.14.

Approximately 14,250 canola contracts were traded as of 10:16 am CDT, with prices in Canadian dollars per metric tonne:

                        Price     Change

Canola          Jul     740.20    up  1.70

                Nov     739.30    up  2.90

                Jan     747.60    up  2.30

                Mar     753.20    up  1.60

About The Author

GFM Network News

GFM Network News

Glacier FarmMedia Feed

Glacier FarmMedia, a division of Glacier Media, is Canada's largest publisher of agricultural news in print and online.

explore

Stories from our other publications