July 3, 2026

15 thoughts on “Potato futures are soaring – should the world be worried?

  1. So the bottom line is the US-Israeli war on Iran is increasingly hitting consumers far beyond energy prices. Wonder how this will land.

  2. Reading that the surge has been driven largely by concerns over the impact of the Middle East war on fertilizer supplies, energy costs and agricultural trade routes — hard to argue with the logic there.

  3. In other words potato-linked financial contracts have spiked more than 700% over the past month and are up over 34% year-on-year as of mid-May, according to Trading Economics data. Curious to see how this develops.

  4. Reading that potato-linked financial contracts have spiked more than 700% over the past month and are up over 34% year-on-year as of mid-May, according to Trading Economics data — hard to argue with the logic there.

  5. In other words according to UN estimates, roughly a third of the global fertilizer trade normally passes through the strait, including shipments of urea, potash and phosphates. Curious to see how this develops.

  6. Think about it: potato-linked financial contracts have spiked more than 700% over the past month and are up over 34% year-on-year as of mid-May, according to Trading Economics data. That speaks volumes.

  7. The detail about the surge has been driven largely by concerns over the impact of the Middle East war on fertilizer supplies, energy costs and agricultural trade routes is something people should sit with.

  8. Basically potato-linked financial contracts have spiked more than 700% over the past month and are up over 34% year-on-year as of mid-May, according to Trading Economics data. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.

  9. The fact that potato-linked financial contracts have spiked more than 700% over the past month and are up over 34% year-on-year as of mid-May, according to Trading Economics data really puts things into perspective.

  10. On one hand disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz have triggered warnings of a global food. But at the same time the US-Israeli war on Iran is increasingly hitting consumers far beyond energy prices.

  11. The bigger issue here is disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz have triggered warnings of a global food. That changes the calculation.

  12. Potato-linked financial contracts have spiked more than 700% over the past month and are up over 34% year-on-year as of mid-May, according to Trading Economics data. Meanwhile the surge has been driven largely by concerns over the impact of the Middle East war on fertilizer supplies, energy costs and agricultural trade routes.

  13. What stands out is according to UN estimates, roughly a third of the global fertilizer trade normally passes through the strait, including shipments of urea, potash and phosphates. That is the part worth paying attention to.

  14. Reading that disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz have triggered warnings of a global food — hard to argue with the logic there.

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