HomeCorporateRECAP: Impact of the Iran War on the Global Animal Feed Industry

RECAP: Impact of the Iran War on the Global Animal Feed Industry

As the US-Iran war and related Middle Eastern disruptions come to an end with an imminent signing of a Peace Accord this week, its time to take a re-look at the impact, this standoff has had on the global animal feed commodities market and likely potential gains ahead.

The escalation of conflict involving Iran emerged as one of the most significant macroeconomic risks facing global agriculture during 2026 apart from sporadic outbreaks of diseases and looming threat of El Nino. Although Iran is not itself a major exporter of corn or soybeans, the conflict affected animal feed markets through five primary transmission channels:

  1. Crude oil and refined fuel prices

  2. Fertiliser production and pricing

  3. Ocean freight and marine insurances

  4. Grain trade logistics through the Middle East

  5. Currency volatility and import financing

With the cessation of hostilities and signing of the peace agreement – a majority of these cost excursions are expected to taper down. Global crude prices are already headed lower at the time of this news write up with Brent Crude was trading down almost 5% at USD 83.37 per barrel.

Feed accounts for approximately:

Sector Feed Cost Share of Production Cost
Broiler 65–70%
Layer 60–65%
Swine 60–70%
Dairy 45–60%
Aquaculture 50–65%

Even modest increases in feed ingredient prices can materially affect livestock profitability.


1. Global Feed Industry at a Glance

Indicator Estimated Value (2025/26)
Global compound feed production ~1.42 billion tonnes
Global feed industry value US$520–560 billion
Global soybean meal consumption ~285 million tonnes
Global corn use for feed ~780 million tonnes
Global wheat use for feed ~165 million tonnes

Sources: USDA WASDE, Alltech Agri-Food Outlook, FAO.


2. How the Conflict Affected Feed Markets

Iran Conflict
      ↓
Higher Crude Oil Prices
      ↓
Higher Marine Fuel Costs
      ↓
Higher Ocean Freight
      ↓
Higher Imported Feed Ingredient Costs

           +

Natural Gas Volatility
      ↓
Higher Ammonia Production Costs
      ↓
Higher Urea Prices
      ↓
Higher Crop Production Costs
      ↓
Higher Grain Prices
      ↓
Higher Feed Manufacturing Costs

3. Commodity Impact Assessment

Corn – Corn remains the world’s largest feed grain

Item Approximate Annual Volume
Global Production ~1.27 billion tonnes
Feed Consumption ~780 million tonnes

Impact witnessed which may start tapering off

Scenario Price Impact
3-month conflict +6% to +10%
Hormuz disruption +10% to +18%

Drivers

  • Freight inflation

  • Currency movements

  • Speculative buying

  • Higher fertiliser costs


Soybeans – Brazil is expected to harvest a record 180.25 million tonnes in 2025/26, helping cushion global supply.

Country Production (Mt)
Brazil 180.25
USA ~119
Argentina ~50

Impact Witnessed

Despite abundant supply, export logistics and shipping costs affected the delivered prices, particularly in Asia which are expected to cool off.


Soybean Meal – The most important protein ingredient in livestock diets.

Region Market Exposure
India High
China Very High
Southeast Asia Very High
Middle East High

Price Sensitivity – Every 5% increase in soybean meal prices can increase broiler feed costs by approximately 2–3%, depending on formulation. With expected drops in freight rates, international prices are expected to see a slight dip


Wheat – Wheat competes with corn in feed formulations based on prevalent prices

Higher freights due to Iran war, did increase wheat inclusion in some regions while reducing competitiveness in others and now with peace accord, corn could regain its place in feed formuale


4. Fertiliser MarketNatural gas is the largest variable cost in nitrogen fertiliser production

Fertiliser Primary Feedstock
Urea Natural Gas
Ammonia Natural Gas
UAN Natural Gas

Middle Eastern producers account for a significant share of global nitrogen fertiliser exports and hence disruptions in supplies tightened global supplies and raised crop production costs which now are expected to cool off.


5. Ocean FreightsApproximately one-fifth of global seaborne oil trade passes through the Strait of Hormuz. Disruptions to this trade route increased:

  • Bunker fuel costs

  • Marine insurances

  • Charter rates

  • Transit times

Shipping Cost Impacts witnessed

Item Change
Bunker fuel +15–30%
War-risk insurance +50–200%
Bulk freight +10–25%

Now with the expected opening of Strait of Hormuz, some of these costs increases are expected to taper down helping animal feed producers with potentially lower feed commodities’ prices.

6. Impact on Feed Manufacturing

Overall feed cost increase was: ~6–10% over the last 3 months and with the halt to hostilities, feed manufacturers’ can expect at least 4 to 5% reduction in commodity prices and a proportionate reduction in overall feed costs.


7. Regional Exposure

Region Risk Level Main Concerns
India High Imported edible oils, freight, fertilisers
China Medium Soybean imports
EU High Energy costs
Middle East High Import dependence
Brazil Low–Medium Freight
USA Low Domestic grain supply

8. India: Feed Industry Assessment

India produces an estimated 45–50 million tonnes of compound feed annually.

Major Segments

Segment Estimated Share
Poultry ~60%
Dairy ~25%
Aquaculture ~10%
Swine & Others ~5%

Key Vulnerabilities

  • Imported edible oils

  • Fertilizer costs

  • Freight

  • Energy

  • Soybean meal price volatility

Animal Feed Manufacturers in India stand to gain most with the expected improvement in global supply chains and lower freight costs.


9. Corporate Exposure

Company Type Relative Exposure
Feed manufacturers High
Poultry integrators High
Dairy processors Medium
Grain traders Mixed
Fertiliser producers Potential beneficiaries
Feed additive companies Moderate

10. Scenario Analysis

With the stopping of Iran Conflict – the Key Factors to Monitor by animal feed manufacturers and integrators’ are:

  • Crude oil benchmarks (Brent, WTI)

  • Natural gas prices

  • Urea export prices

  • Corn and soybean futures (CBOT)

  • Soybean meal futures

  • Baltic Dry Index

  • Marine insurance premiums

  • Export restrictions by major grain-producing countries

The 2nd Half of the Calendar Year 2026 appears to begin well for the animal health industry as man-made challenges to supply chains ease off, releasing energies for fighting the sporadic HPAi affecting poultry farms and ASF tormenting swine farms in some regions of the world. 

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