Stop the ride

Sara Mazo AncocheaFrancisco Ruiz Camacho
06-Mar-2026 (2 months 29 days ago)

The year 2026 has stepped on the gas, and in just 62 days, we have seen news that we did not think possible (not to be discouraging, but just 61 days ago, we were all ready to celebrate the end of the year, drinks in hand!)

After the “surgical operation” in Venezuela, we see how Israel has managed to impose its thesis of the imminent danger that Iran represents for the Israeli state and the United States. Both countries have begun a military operation in the region that, within a few hours, spread to countries across the Middle East. Not only did U.S. intelligence manage to decapitate the regime by locating Khamenei and eliminating him in the first hours of the conflict, but we have also seen the Iranian response, bombing global symbols of stability and luxury such as the Burj Al Arab in Dubai.

What was initially presented as a quick operation is beginning to look much longer than originally expected as the hours and days pass. In three to four weeks, we’ll see. The result? Stock markets falling, oil rising, gas prices surging, and one of the nerve centers of global trade brought to a standstill. Let’s take it step by step.

<p>Maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz. Source: MarineTraffic.com</p>

The question is: what do we do now? As we have mentioned, this season does not appear likely to be short, and the consequences of the generalized rise in prices will grow the longer the conflict and disruptions to global trade last. That means, once again, that when market prices are low, purchasing decisions need to be made. Throughout 2026, corn has traded around €210/t for forward positions, wheat around €216/t for new-crop positions, and soybeans around €315/t for the entire year. In short, the market has offered buying opportunities, but at the local level, doubts about pig prices—due to the appearance of African swine fever in the Barcelona area and declining consumption—have discouraged purchases by meat producers. Locally, in Spain, the continuous rains and storms that have been with us since September are starting to worry farmers. Spring will begin shortly, and that is when we will start to clear up these uncertainties.

As if that were not enough, at the time of writing, Trump has threatened Spain with cutting off any trade relations following Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s refusal to allow the United States to use the Rota and Morón bases for the American offensive against Iran.

Now comes the hardest part: waiting to see whether things return to normal, or whether the market has already incorporated the conflict risk premium into prices and will no longer react upward to every piece of news, as happened during the war in Ukraine—where, let us not forget, the bombings continue and it remains a sword of Damocles over the global grain trade. But for that, much more will still have to be written.