LUBBOCK, Texas (RFD NEWS) — The Panama Canal is moving more ships and cargo in fiscal 2026 while keeping traffic flowing.
Officials said 6,288 vessels crossed the canal from October through March, up 224 from a year earlier. Volume reached 254 million tons (PC/UMS), about 5 percent above the same period last fiscal year.
Reservations remain strong, but the system is still working without a queue. Most ships book in advance, which protects scheduled transit slots and gives shippers greater certainty in a busy market.
Container traffic and liquefied petroleum gas were key drivers in recent months. Daily averages reached 34 vessels in January and 37 in March, with some days topping 40 transits.
Water levels are favorable, and conservation steps are in place ahead of possible El Niño risk later this year. Full lakes should help the canal maintain reliable service through the next dry season.
Farm-Level Takeaway: Steady Panama Canal operations help support more predictable shipping conditions for global agriculture.
Tony St. James, RFD News Markets Specialist
DOJ and USDA investigate beef industry concentration, with Big Four packers under scrutiny and a major settlement announcement expected later this week.
Seasonal pricing strength is lining up with crop stress, giving wheat producers another weather-driven marketing window. Shaun Haney joins us to discuss concerns from ag bankers on farm profitability.
Farmers still earn only a small share of consumer food spending, even as post-farm costs continue to take most of the dollar.
Corn and cotton gave the strongest signals this week, while soybean demand remained softer than in the previous report.
StoneX’s Josh Linville discusses USDA’s efforts to boost domestic fertilizer production and his outlook on supply and prices.
Domestic demand policy may play a larger role if export competition continues to limit price recovery.