Traders unfazed as S. Korea’s feed sector buys corn despite bird flu

Traders have responded coolly to news that South Korea is battling an outbreak of avian flu, with most agreeing that the...

Traders have responded coolly to news that South Korea is battling an outbreak of avian flu, with most agreeing that the situation is likely to be contained quickly and won’t impact the country’s recent corn buying appetite.   

The highly-contagious bird flu started spreading across South Korea with strains found at a chicken egg farm in Yeoju, Gyeonggi Province earlier this week, prompting the government to impose an immediate standstill order for all poultry farms.

“The strain of the virus has not been verified, but if confirmed as highly pathogenic, about 1 million quails and ducks would have to be culled immediately,” the Korea Herald said in an article published this week.

Traders who supply corn and meals into the key destination market – with South Korea one of the world’s biggest corn importers – are watching the situation closely in case it triggers a deterioration in corn consumption as well as purchasing interest.

“It seems like bird flu is not a big deal yet, but the market is concerned of it and we will need to see if it impacts the demand side,” a South Korea-based trader said.

However, market participants are not overreacting, as bird flu is often a seasonal occurrence, coming every year in winter and often quickly contained by existing containment measures.

“It comes and goes, nothing special, poultry producers can manage its consequences”, another trader said, while the relative expensiveness of alternatives like feed wheat are likely to mean appetite for corn remains strong.

“Feed wheat is too expensive this year. Corn is by far the cheapest ingredient, feed producers maximise it in feed rations, current pace suggests nothing else but an increase in volumes,” he added, anticipating demand for corn to hold up.

South Korea’s feed importers have continued securing volumes for shipments in 2021, with 463,000 mt traded since the start of December, following a strong period in October and November when at least 2.5 million mt was booked by the country’s main importers. 

Corn processing association Kocopia was the latest to buy, picking up a 60,000 mt cargo from Posco International at $250.25/mt on a CFR South Korea basis.

Local authorities are on alert though, remembering the outbreak between 2016-2017 that wiped out more than 38 million chickens, ducks and quails, with the government spending more than $3 million to help poultry farms recover.

For more information on South Korea’s corn buying, please see our Tender Dashboard.

What to read next
The publication of Fastmarkets’ AG-WHE-0004 Wheat 10.5% FOB Australia W APW, AG-WHE-0005 Wheat 9.5% FOB Australia W ASW and AG-BRY-0001 Barley feed barley FOB Australia assessments for February 2 was delayed due to a technical reason. Fastmarkets’ pricing database has been updated.
In today's market, effective food and beverage procurement is critical for profitability. However, many procurement teams face challenges due to fragmented data, where packaging and ingredient costs are managed in separate silos. This disconnect creates a massive blind spot, making it difficult to challenge supplier price hikes or accurately model total product costs.
The start of the new 2026 financial year makes it possible to highlight several key developments in the Russian wheat market during the first half of the 2025/26 marketing year. These include higher production, slower export activity, very stable prices and the continued dominance of three major exporters in terms of market share.
The Constanta-Varna-Burgas (CVB) wheat market has entered the 2025-2026 marketing year from a firmer price base than last season, but underlying fundamentals point to a more challenging trading environment. While early summer values reflected a sense of tightness, high regional yields, weak margins and cautious farmer behavior are reshaping market dynamics and export flows, according to sources.
In this month's featured insight, find out more from Fastmarkets' senior analyst Eduardo Gonzalez about how non-traditional destinations like South Korea and Vietnam fuel a structural shift in US export demands.
Chicago and Kansas wheat futures decreased on Friday December 5 as market participants focused on ample global supplies and favorable growing conditions in competing export regions, such as Europe and Canada.