The Iran war has a second supply crisis nobody is pricing.
It’s not oil. It’s food.
$NTR hit a 52-week high this week. $CF is up 77% YTD.
And the trade still has legs, but only if you buy the right name.
Here’s why:
1. Hormuz isn’t just an oil chokepoint
33% of global seaborne fertilizer trade moves through the Strait of Hormuz. Qatar and Iran together export 350,000–400,000 metric tons of urea per month through it.
Unlike oil which has the SPR, bypass pipelines, and IEA release mechanisms there is no strategic fertilizer reserve. When Hormuz closes, the fertilizer market is on its own.
2. First time in history; four supply shocks hitting simultaneously
> Middle East: Hormuz closed, QatarEnergy halted ammonia/urea production March 2
> Russia: Ukrainian drone strikes hitting nitrogen plants + export restrictions
> China: Phosphate export ban extended through August 2026
> Europe: Still running nitrogen at 75% capacity from the gas crisis
The result:
Urea: +77% since December 2025.
Anhydrous ammonia: $850/ton in Iowa on Feb 13 → $1,050/ton today.
North America price index: $810/ton — above the August 2025 peak.
3. The clock is the cruelest part
50% of U.S. nitrogen is applied in spring. Corn Belt planting begins late April. Gulf-to-US Gulf Coast transit = 30 days. Product that should be arriving now already isn’t coming.
25% of American farmers haven’t bought fertilizer yet for this season. At $1,050/ton anhydrous, they’re either paying up, driving prices further, or rotating to soybeans.
A mass corn-to-soybean rotation means lower corn yields, tighter supply, and a secondary food price shock hitting grocery shelves by fall 2026. The chain from Hormuz closing to the cereal aisle is already in motion.
4. The plays and the landmine
$NTR, currently at $83, targets $96–100.
Nutrien produces all three nutrients; potash, nitrogen, phosphate, from North American operations with zero Middle Eastern logistics exposure. Wells Fargo upgraded to Overweight ($100 target) March 13. Jefferies upgraded to Buy ($96 target) same day. Cup-and-handle forming technically. Captures the full margin expansion without the shipping risk. Least DOJ exposure of the group.
$CF, currently at ATH.
The fundamental thesis is completely real. But here’s what the bulls aren’t talking about:
> DOJ antitrust probe opened. CF named directly.
>Senator Hawley sent a 9-page price gouging letter to CF’s CEO demanding document preservation from January 2025 to present.
> CF EVP sold 18,041 shares on March 13. Stock was at an all-time high. DOJ probe already open. Hawley letter already public.
When insiders sell at ATH into a regulatory investigation on national TV, that is not a company where the upside is unlimited from here. The move happened. The risk is asymmetric now.
$MOS, fairly speculative. currently at $31, cheapest at 11x forward PE.
DOJ named too but at a discount to CF. China phosphate ban lifting August is a headwind. High risk, high reward for size.
5. The second-order nobody is modeling yet
If fertilizer application drops more than 10%, agronomists estimate global corn and wheat yields fall 5–8%.
That’s a Q3/Q4 food price shock that isn’t priced into anything right now. ADM, Bunge, ag-tech precision application names are the next layer of this trade.
The full play:
$NTR, cleanest execution, 15–20% potential upside.
$CF real tailwind, real regulatory grenade. Risky play.
$MOS, speculative position only.
The corn goes in the ground in six weeks. The fertilizer isn’t going to get there in time for everyone.
That’s not a thesis. That’s already happening.
Please note; This note financial advice. Commodity markets are volatile. DOJ investigations carry binary outcomes.
It’s not oil. It’s food.
$NTR hit a 52-week high this week. $CF is up 77% YTD.
And the trade still has legs, but only if you buy the right name.
Here’s why:
1. Hormuz isn’t just an oil chokepoint
33% of global seaborne fertilizer trade moves through the Strait of Hormuz. Qatar and Iran together export 350,000–400,000 metric tons of urea per month through it.
Unlike oil which has the SPR, bypass pipelines, and IEA release mechanisms there is no strategic fertilizer reserve. When Hormuz closes, the fertilizer market is on its own.
2. First time in history; four supply shocks hitting simultaneously
> Middle East: Hormuz closed, QatarEnergy halted ammonia/urea production March 2
> Russia: Ukrainian drone strikes hitting nitrogen plants + export restrictions
> China: Phosphate export ban extended through August 2026
> Europe: Still running nitrogen at 75% capacity from the gas crisis
The result:
Urea: +77% since December 2025.
Anhydrous ammonia: $850/ton in Iowa on Feb 13 → $1,050/ton today.
North America price index: $810/ton — above the August 2025 peak.
3. The clock is the cruelest part
50% of U.S. nitrogen is applied in spring. Corn Belt planting begins late April. Gulf-to-US Gulf Coast transit = 30 days. Product that should be arriving now already isn’t coming.
25% of American farmers haven’t bought fertilizer yet for this season. At $1,050/ton anhydrous, they’re either paying up, driving prices further, or rotating to soybeans.
A mass corn-to-soybean rotation means lower corn yields, tighter supply, and a secondary food price shock hitting grocery shelves by fall 2026. The chain from Hormuz closing to the cereal aisle is already in motion.
4. The plays and the landmine
$NTR, currently at $83, targets $96–100.
Nutrien produces all three nutrients; potash, nitrogen, phosphate, from North American operations with zero Middle Eastern logistics exposure. Wells Fargo upgraded to Overweight ($100 target) March 13. Jefferies upgraded to Buy ($96 target) same day. Cup-and-handle forming technically. Captures the full margin expansion without the shipping risk. Least DOJ exposure of the group.
$CF, currently at ATH.
The fundamental thesis is completely real. But here’s what the bulls aren’t talking about:
> DOJ antitrust probe opened. CF named directly.
>Senator Hawley sent a 9-page price gouging letter to CF’s CEO demanding document preservation from January 2025 to present.
> CF EVP sold 18,041 shares on March 13. Stock was at an all-time high. DOJ probe already open. Hawley letter already public.
When insiders sell at ATH into a regulatory investigation on national TV, that is not a company where the upside is unlimited from here. The move happened. The risk is asymmetric now.
$MOS, fairly speculative. currently at $31, cheapest at 11x forward PE.
DOJ named too but at a discount to CF. China phosphate ban lifting August is a headwind. High risk, high reward for size.
5. The second-order nobody is modeling yet
If fertilizer application drops more than 10%, agronomists estimate global corn and wheat yields fall 5–8%.
That’s a Q3/Q4 food price shock that isn’t priced into anything right now. ADM, Bunge, ag-tech precision application names are the next layer of this trade.
The full play:
$NTR, cleanest execution, 15–20% potential upside.
$CF real tailwind, real regulatory grenade. Risky play.
$MOS, speculative position only.
The corn goes in the ground in six weeks. The fertilizer isn’t going to get there in time for everyone.
That’s not a thesis. That’s already happening.
Please note; This note financial advice. Commodity markets are volatile. DOJ investigations carry binary outcomes.
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