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E-Malt.com NewsLetter

RombBullet Quote of the week
RombBullet Currency rates
RombBullet Brewers equities
RombBullet Market prices change trend
RombBullet Industry news
RombBullet Graph of the week
RombBullet Table of the week
RombBullet Prices evolution
RombBullet Barley prices
RombBullet Theoretical malt prices
RombBullet Business history
RombBullet Agenda
RombBullet News articles




Last five Flashes



Last five graphs

Note: All graphs issued with e-malt.com newsletters are published in "Graph" section of e-malt.com site.



Last five tables

All e-malt.com tables are published in e-malt.com Statistics section. The Statistics section includes Barley statistics, Malt statistics and Beer statistics. The tables related to barley are published in Barley Statistics section, the tables related to malt in Malt Statistics section and the tables related to beer in Beer Statistics section.



Last five prices evolution




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E-Malt.com Flash 05a
January 26 - January 28, 2026


Quote of the Week

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Currency Rates


Base Currency: Euro
on January 28, 2026
Base Currency: US Dollar
on January 28, 2026
      1 EUR = 1.1927 USD
1 EUR = 0.8684 GBP
1 EUR = 1.6303 CAD
1 EUR = 1.7168 AUD
1 EUR = 183.1840 JPY
1 EUR = 6.2600 BRL
1 EUR = 91.1921 RUB
1 EUR = 8.2948 CNY
      1 USD = 0.8383 EUR
1 USD = 0.7280 GBP
1 USD = 1.3669 CAD
1 USD = 1.4393 AUD
1 USD = 153.5870 JPY
1 USD = 5.2487 BRL
1 USD = 76.4598 RUB
1 USD = 6.9547 CNY


Currency Rates Chart

Equities of the Largest Breweries

Breweries Equities

Average Market Prices Change Trend


January 28, 2026
French Barley/Malt
Crop 2025
Bulk
EUR/T %
2RS Malting Barley (FOB Creil) 191.00-193.00 -
6RW Malting Barley (FOB Creil) 190.00-192.00 -
Feed Barley (FOB Creil) 187.00-189.00 -
2RS Malt (FOB Antwerp) 525.50-527.50 -
6RW Malt (FOB Antwerp) 524.50-526.50 -
French Barley/Malt
Crop 2026
Bulk
EUR/T %
2RS Malting Barley (FOB Creil) 210.00-212.00 -
6RW Malting Barley (FOB Creil) 200.00-202.00 -
Feed Barley (FOB Creil) 171.00-173.00 -
2RS Malt (FOB Antwerp) 547.00-549.00 -
6RW Malt (FOB Antwerp) 535.00-537.00 -
German Malting Barley
Crop 2025
Bulk
Ex Farm
EUR/T %
Average Malting Barley Price nq  
-No change; upPrice increase; downPrice decrease versus last publication.

Click here to see our Market Prices History.


Top Industry News


Brewery news UK: Brewery closures increase dramatically during 2025 ...Click here
Brewery news Germany: Another mid-sized German brewery falls into insolvency ...Click here

Barley news France: French barley prices continue to be mainly influenced by feed complex ...Click here
Barley news Canada: Barley crop expected to fall back to 9 mln tonnes in 2026 ...Click here


More Industry News


Barley news Australia: Falling beer consumption also hurst barley farmers ...Click here
Brewery news South Africa: Beer industry warns above-inflation excise hike could threaten jobs ...Click here
Brewery news EU & India: Imported beer, wine to get cheaper in India thanks to proposed free trade agreement with the EU ...Click here
Brewery news South Korea: Craft beer industry on the brink of a wave of bankruptcies ...Click here
Brewery news Ireland: Heineken to hike draught beer prices ...Click here
Brewery news The Czech Republic & Panama: Kofola ČeskoSlovensko increases share in Panama-headquartered brewer Alta Fermentación ...Click here

Graph of the week



Table of the week

China Hops Area and Production 2018-2025s


Table of the week.
Prices Evolution

Prices evolution

Barley Prices



Theoretical Malt Prices


These Days in Business History


26 January
1871 - US income tax repealed
1886 - Karl Benz patents 1st auto with burning motor
1921 - Akio Morita, the co-founder of Sony Corp., is born in Nagoya, Japan

27 January
1880 - Thomas Edison patents electric incandescent lamp
1888 - National Geographic Society organizes
1926 - 1st public demonstration of television by John L Baird, London
2006 - Western Union discontinues its Telegram and Commercial Messaging services

28 January
1878 - 1st telephone exchange (New Haven, CT)
1878 - Yale Daily News published, 1st college daily newspaper
1998 - Michelangelo's "Christ & the Woman of Samaria", sold for $7.4 million

Agenda

February 2026:
05 - 06: Glug Swiss 2026 (Alte Reithalle, Aarau, Switzerland)
13 - 16: HoReCa 2026 (Athens, Greece)
15 - 17: BBTech Expo 2026 (Rimini, Italy)
23 - 23: Beer Experience 2026 (Antwerp, Belgium)
27 - 01 March: Finest Spirits 2026 (Munich, Germany)

March 2026:
04 - 07: Festival Brasileiro da Cerveja 2026 (Blumenau, Brazil)
15 - 17: Planete Biere Marseille 2026 (Marseille, France)
18 - 19: BeerX 2026 (Liverpool, UK)
20 - 22: St Malo Craft Beer Expo 2026 (St Malo, France)
24 - 26: 110th International Brewing & Engineering Conference 2026 (Erding, Germany)
24 - 26: RMI Global Conference 2026 (Lisbon, Portugal)
26 - 28: Warsaw Beer Festival 2026 (Warsaw, Poland)

April 2026:
07 - 09: Craft Beer China 2026 (Shanghai, China)
10 - 11: InnBrew 2026 (Barcelona, Spain)
10 - 12: Barcelona Beer Festival 2026 (Barcelona, Spain)
16 - 18: KIBEX 2026 (Seoul, South Korea)
20 - 22: Craft Brewers Conference & BrewExpo America 2026 (Philadelphia, USA)
22 - 22: World Beer Cup 2026 (Pennsylvania Convention Center, Philadelphia, USA)
22 - 22: World Beer Cup 2026 (Pennsylvania Convention Center, Philadelphia, USA)
28 - 30: 28th Annual International Beer and Cider Strategies 2026 (InterContinental Barcelona, Spain)

May 2026:
04 - 07: Worldwide Distilled Spirits Conference 2026 (EICC, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK)
04 - 10: Budapest Beer Week 2026 (Budapest, Hungary)
19 - 21: Expo Antad & Alimentaria Mexico 2026 (Expo Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico)
29 - 30: Copenhagen Beer Festival 2026 (Copenhagen, Denmark)
29 - 30: Tallinn Craft Beer Weekend 2026 (Tallinn, Estonia)

June 2026:
08 - 10: Brewing Conference Bangkok 2026 (Muang Thong Thani, Impact Challenger Hall, Jupiter 4-5, Bangkok, Thailand)
09 - 10: IGC Grains Conference 2026 (2 Savoy Place, London, UK)
09 - 11: Brasil Brau 2026 (Sao Paulo, Brazil)
17 - 18: Global Beer Summit 2026 (Brussels, Belgium)

July 2026:
17 - 18: London Craft Beer Festival 2026 (London, UK)

August 2026:
06 - 08: VIETFOOD & BEVERAGE - PROPACK VIETNAM 2026 (799 Nguyen Van Linh Street, Tan My Ward, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam)
21 - 22: Beervana 2026 (Wellington, New Zealand)

September 2026:
12 - 13: Bruges Beer Festival 2026 (Bruges, Belgium)
19 - 04 October: Oktoberfest 2026 (Munich, Germany)
24 - 27: Mondial de la Biere 2026 (Montreal, Canada)
26 - 28: Whisky Live Paris 2026 (Paris, France)

October 2026:
08 - 10: The Great American Beer Festival 2026 (Denver, USA)
15 - 16: Salon du Brasseur 2026 (Parc Expo Nancy, France)
23 - 25: Stockholm Beer & Whisky Festival 2026 (Stockholm, Sweden)
28 - 29: Brew Asia 2026 (Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam)
31 - 03 November: Planete Biere Rennes 2026 (Rennes, France)

November 2026:
10 - 12: Brau Beviale 2026 (Nuremberg, Germany)
23 - 25: 16th Iberoamerican VLB Symposium Brewing & Filling Technology (Panama)

More events are available on site e-malt.com


BreweryBrewery News Brewery


Brewery newsUK: Brewery closures increase dramatically during 2025
Brewery closure rates increased “dramatically” during 2025 and saw a 37% spike compared to 2024, according to new data from UK’s Society of Independent ...More info on site


Brewery newsGermany: Another mid-sized German brewery falls into insolvency
Germany’s brewing industry is facing another setback as yet another significant midsized brewery has run into serious financial difficulty. The plan insolvency of Brauhaus ...More info on site


Brewery news South Africa: Beer industry warns above-inflation excise hike could threaten jobs
As South Africans await the 2026 budget next month, the beer industry is warning that another above-inflation excise hike could strain small brewers, jeopardise thousands of jobs, and push consumers toward the illicit alcohol market, MSN reported on January 24.

This comes as Minister of Finance Enoch Godongwana is set to table the 2026 budget on February 25, 2026. The association said repeated above-inflation excise increases have already squeezed margins, limited investment, and placed small brewers under serious financial pressure.

Last year, the government raised beer excise by 6.75%. The association has called on the National Treasury to implement a predictable, CPI-linked excise framework that would give brewers certainty and protect jobs.

"The reality is that beer companies — large and small — already carry a double tax burden: corporate income tax and excise duty. While government may argue that excise is meant to influence consumption, the data shows a more troubling outcome".

"Beer is largely consumed by middle- and lower-income South Africans who are already under severe financial pressure. Continued price increases on legal beer do not meaningfully curb consumption — they simply shift demand toward cheaper, unregulated, and unsafe alternatives".

South Africa's beer industry supports an estimated 210,000 jobs and contributed roughly R98 ...More info on site


Brewery news EU & India: Imported beer, wine to get cheaper in India thanks to proposed free trade agreement with the EU
Imported beer, wine and spirits are set to become significantly cheaper once the proposed free trade agreement (FTA) between India and the European Union comes into force, with steep cuts planned in existing import duties, News18 reported on January 27.

At present, wine and spirits attract a tariff of 150%, while beer faces an import duty of 110%. Under the FTA, these duties will be reduced to 40% on alcohol and 50% on beer. Officials said the reduction in duties on wine and spirits will be phased in over a few years. For instance, the import tax on wine is expected to fall from 150% to 75% in the first year, before being gradually brought down to the agreed minimum level.

The European Union, comprising 27 countries, is among the world’s largest producers of alcoholic beverages. European brands enjoy strong aspirational value among the urban middle class, but high prices have so far restricted their reach. Popular imported beers sold in India include Dutch brand Heineken, Belgian labels Stella Artois and Leffe, Germany’s Warsteiner, Denmark’s Carlsberg and Ireland’s Guinness.

Trade data show that India imported spirits worth $64.9 million from the EU in 2023–24, a figure that industry experts expect to rise sharply ...More info on site


Brewery news South Korea: Craft beer industry on the brink of a wave of bankruptcies
Korea's craft beer industry is on the brink of a wave of bankruptcies due to management woes. As alcohol consumption trends have shifted in recent years and demand for craft beer has decreased, collaborations with conglomerates and convenience stores and low-price competition have overlapped, adding to the expense burden, Chosunbiz reported on January 28.

According to the industry on the 28th, Amazing Brewing Company, once one of the leading breweries in Korea's craft beer market, is expected to go through bankruptcy proceedings. The company entered rehabilitation proceedings in Aug. last year but failed to find a suitable buyer and ultimately did not submit a rehabilitation plan within the deadline.

Earlier, on the 14th of last month, Amazing Brewing Company ended operations at its Seongsu-dong location, which served as both a brewery and a pub. Opened in 2016 as Amazing Brewing Company's first brewpub, the Seongsu location was called an "urban brewery" and was regarded as a symbolic space among craft beer enthusiasts.

Riding the craft beer boom, Amazing Brewing Company expanded its scale and even pursued an initial public offering (IPO), but as growth slowed, it eventually scrapped the plan. The company posted losses for two consecutive years starting in 2023. Its net ...More info on site


Brewery news Ireland: Heineken to hike draught beer prices
Heineken is to increase what it charges Ireland’s publicans for its draught beer products from next month, RTE reported on January 27.

The price hike will be applied across the company's range, which includes Heineken, Heineken 0.0, Coors, Tiger, Birra Moretti, Murphy's, Orchard Thieves and Beamish.

The average 3.1% increase will see the cost per pint, at a wholesale level, rise by between 6c and 7c, depending on the brand.

The changes will take effect from 16 February.

Heineken Ireland said its business "continues to face cost increases."

In a statement, a spokesperson said while the company is "committed to finding and acting on ways to reduce those costs, we unfortunately need to amend our pricing".

"A blended 3.1% increase will take effect from 16 February 2026 across our draught product range," the statement said.

It added: "As strong supporters of the on-trade market we will continue to invest in a range of supports that meet customer and consumer needs."

In a letter to publicans, seen by RTÉ News, Heineken said any deliveries made on or after the date "will be charged at the new prices".

"As an independent business, the price at which you choose to resell our products to customers is entirely at your discretion," the letter ...More info on site


Brewery news The Czech Republic & Panama: Kofola ČeskoSlovensko increases share in Panama-headquartered brewer Alta Fermentación
Czech soft drinks player Kofola ČeskoSlovensko has raised the size of its stake in Latin American drinks business Alta Fermentación, Investing.com reported on January 26.

In a statement to investors, the company said it would be increasing its share in the Panama-headquartered brewer and distiller by 10%, giving it a 49% holding in the company. Financial terms were not disclosed.

Alta Fermentación manages three microbreweries: The Pub SAS, Cervecería La Rana Dorada in Panama and Cerveceria Sinners in Ecuador.

The Pub SAS business produces the Pola del Pub and Germania beer brands in Bogotá and also runs a chain of 13 El Irish pubs in the city.

Alta Fermentación also owns the Panama-based rum distiller Pedro Mandinga. Its range includes silver, spiced and blended rums, as well as flavoured liqueurs.

The group also also operates the Colombian coffee roaster Colo Coffee which sells coffee under the Colo brand and runs nine cafes in Bogotá.

Kofola said Alta Fermentación is expected to book over $20m in sales and more than $4m in EBITDA in 2025.

In a separate statement, Jannis Samaras, the CEO of the Kofola Group, said: “Coffee originally introduced us to Latin America. It was important for us to obtain quality beans for our coffee brands, ...More info on site



BarleyBarley News Barley


Barley newsFrance: French barley prices continue to be mainly influenced by feed complex
The main influence for French barley prices continues to come mainly from the feed complex, with malting barley struggling to keep pace and maintain ...More info on site


Barley newsCanada: Barley crop expected to fall back to 9 mln tonnes in 2026
Canada’s barley crop’25 surprised many at 9.7 mln tonnes, and a fall back to 9.0 mln tonnes is forecast for crop’26, RMI Analytics said ...More info on site


Barley news Australia: Falling beer consumption also hurst barley farmers
CommBank agriculture and sustainability economist Dennis Voznesenski said globally falling beer consumption did not just impact beer companies, Newsreel reported on January 27.

It also impacted farmers who produced barley, which plays a vital role in beer production.

A report, released by CommBank this week, said September quarter 2025 data showed global beer sales volumes declined over the past year, with the largest falls recorded in the United States and Europe.

“Asia has held up better, but overall demand has weakened,” the report said.

“Shifts in alcohol preferences are part of the story, but economic conditions are also playing a role.”

CommBank economists are forecasting global economic growth of 2.7 percent in 2026, down from the historical average of about 3.7 percent.

“That’s a full percentage point lower than what we’re used to,” Mr Voznesenski said. “So if we’re not drinking because economic times are tough, this year might not be much different.”

“When beer demand falls, that barley needs to find another home,” he said. “If you’re not making beer out of it, you feed it to animals.”

Domestic feed demand for barley is expected to be reduced this year due to new Chinese quotas on Australian beef exports. Less beef demand from China could reduce ...More info on site


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