# [WARNING] New El Niño 2026 Seen As Potentially Historic Event

*Saturday, June 13, 2026 at 5:00 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-13T17:00:52.614Z (2d ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, AGRICULTURE, ENERGY, WEATHER, RISK_PREMIUM
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/10323.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

---

**Summary**: NOAA‑cited meteorologists warn the 2026 El Niño could be an unprecedentedly strong event. If this forecast firms up, markets will rapidly re‑price global ag supply risks, softs, and certain energy balances, adding weather risk premia across multiple complexes.

## Detail

1) What happened:
Ecuadorian outlet Primicias reports that meteorologists from NOAA assess the developing 2026 El Niño as having potential to be a historically intense, unprecedented event, with month‑by‑month projections indicating a very strong phase later this year. While still a forecast, the framing as “historic, without precedent” materially raises the probability that markets will begin to price in large‑scale climate anomalies across the Pacific Rim and beyond.

2) Supply/demand impact:
A super‑El Niño historically alters rainfall and temperature patterns across key agricultural regions. Likely impacts if this verifies:
- South America: Higher risk of drought in parts of Brazil’s Center‑South (coffee, sugarcane, soy) and Argentina’s grain belt; flooding risk in parts of Peru/Ecuador. A 5–10% hit to Brazilian coffee or sugar output vs trend is plausible in strong events.
- Asia: Higher drought risk in Southeast Asia and parts of India, threatening palm oil, rice, sugar, and potentially cutting hydro power output (supportive for coal and LNG demand).
- North America: US Corn Belt and wheat regions can see yield volatility; historically, strong El Niños have cut US corn yields by ~3–5% vs trend in some episodes, though impacts vary.
Global ag balances for corn, wheat, soy, rice, coffee, sugar, cocoa, and palm oil could tighten, pushing prices 10–30% above baseline if severe anomalies materialize. Hydropower shortfalls in Latin America and Asia raise marginal demand for fuel oil, coal, and LNG, especially in Brazil and Southeast Asia.

3) Affected assets and direction:
- Bullish: CBOT corn, soybeans, Chicago wheat; ICE coffee, sugar, and cocoa; palm oil futures; freight rates on dry bulk (if grain flows reroute); LNG JKM and Asian coal if hydro underperforms.
- Potentially bullish: Fertilizer equities (volatility in planting decisions); some LatAm power prices.
- Bearish: Selected exporters’ FX could benefit (BRL, ARS black‑market, IDR) but importers (e.g., Egypt, Philippines) face food‑inflation and FX pressure.

4) Historical precedent:
1997–98 and 2015–16 strong El Niños saw marked rallies in softs and grains, plus regional power/fuel dislocations. Markets tend to front‑run confirmed forecasts by 1–3 months.

5) Duration:
If a super‑El Niño is confirmed over the next 1–2 months, the impact is structural on a 12–18 month horizon, spanning at least one full crop cycle and potentially two in some regions.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** CBOT Corn, CBOT Wheat, CBOT Soybeans, ICE Arabica Coffee, ICE Sugar No.11, ICE Cocoa, BMD Crude Palm Oil, Asian LNG (JKM), API2 Coal, BRL, IDR
