Just noticed something interesting in the commodity markets lately. Blueberry prices have been climbing—the global index jumped 4.8% last week and retailers are mostly holding or raising prices. Seems like there's a real supply crunch happening early in the season, with weather issues in Florida and Georgia throwing off the usual harvest timing. The overlap with Mexican shipments is tighter than normal, which is keeping the market tight. This kind of berry shortage doesn't happen every year, so it's worth paying attention to.



Meanwhile, the broader commodity picture is pretty messy. Strawberries are getting crushed on price despite higher volumes—imports up 6.31% but total value actually dropped 1.47% because average prices fell 7.32%. Mexico basically owns the market with over 97% of US supply, so when they flood it, prices just collapse. Blueberries are holding up better though, probably because of that seasonal supply gap we're seeing.

Pineapples are another story. Costa Rica got hit hard last season—yields dropped 15% from all that rain—and now export boxes are going for $19-25. That's record territory. But here's the thing: if prices stay that high, people will just buy other fruit instead. The market's testing whether this shortage can actually stick.

On the plastics side, resin costs have been volatile. They spiked from $1,000 to $1,700 per ton, mainly because oil prices are all over the place and there's tanker congestion in the Strait of Hormuz. Even if things improve, industry people in El Salvador are saying it'll take months for shipments to normalize. Meanwhile, cocoa's the opposite—prices are down 58% from a year ago and inventories are at seven-month highs. West Africa had good weather and demand slowed, so there's actually too much supply.

What caught my eye is how different each commodity is behaving. Some are genuinely tight (blueberries, pineapples), some are oversupplied (cocoa, strawberries), and some are just dealing with logistics chaos (plastics). For anyone watching food or packaging costs, this divergence matters. The berry shortage situation especially seems like it could move prices for the next few months if weather doesn't cooperate.
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