Walnut kernel prices in Delhi have turned softer after a broad-based Rs 50/kg decline across grades, driven more by a sudden cooling in dry fruit demand than by any crop shock. With institutional and export buyers largely absent and freight risk premia rising on Middle East routes, near‑term prices are likely to stay under pressure, though downside may be cushioned by higher logistics costs and selective export interest.
The latest session in Delhi’s wholesale dry fruit market saw walnut kernel prices corrected to roughly EUR 7.5–13.0/kg across grades after converting from rupees, with the entire range marked down by about EUR 0.45/kg. This move came alongside weakness in almonds and other nuts, underscoring a generalized risk‑off mood rather than walnut-specific news. At the same time, FOB offers from China and Europe have remained broadly steady in recent weeks, while war-related shipping surcharges and fuel costs are increasing uncertainty for forward import and re‑export flows.
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📈 Prices & Spreads
Delhi’s wholesale market is currently showing a wide quality spread, from lower‑end broken kernels to premium whole light kernels. After Tuesday’s Rs 50/kg cut (around EUR 0.45/kg), indicative traded levels cluster roughly between EUR 7.5 and 13.0/kg, depending on colour and integrity of kernels. The simultaneous markdown across the entire range confirms that selling pressure is market‑wide, not restricted to low‑quality stock.
Export‑oriented benchmarks are more stable. Recent FOB offers in Dalian for Chinese walnut kernels are broadly unchanged in March, with light pieces and broken grades trading near EUR 2.1–3.1/kg, while organic light halves from India and the US for European buyers are indicated around EUR 4.0–4.8/kg. This relative stability offshore contrasts with the Delhi spot correction, highlighting that the current move is primarily a local demand event rather than a global price collapse.
| Product | Origin / Location | Grade | Price (EUR/kg, FOB) | Trend vs early March |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Walnut kernels | China, Dalian | Light pieces 8–12 mm | ≈ 2.8 | Stable |
| Walnut kernels | China, Dalian | Light broken 4–8 mm | ≈ 2.9 | Stable |
| Walnut kernels (organic) | India, New Delhi | Light halves | ≈ 5.3 | Stable |
| Walnut kernels (organic) | US, via London | Light halves 80% | ≈ 4.5 | Stable |
🌍 Supply & Demand
On the supply side, traders in Delhi report no fresh disruptions in arrivals from India’s main producing region of Jammu and Kashmir, nor from imports sourced out of the US, Chile, and China. Stocks in the pipeline are described as adequate, with some stockists increasing selling in response to the softer tone. This additional selling, combined with normal physical availability, has amplified the intraday price decline.
Demand, by contrast, is clearly underperforming. Institutional buyers such as hotels, bakeries, and food processors are largely on the sidelines, and the market is currently outside India’s peak festive consumption window. The correction in almonds, nigella and other dry fruit categories on the same trading day reinforces the view that buyers are retrenching across the board, possibly to manage working capital and reassess consumer offtake at current retail prices.
📊 Fundamentals & External Drivers
Fundamentally, walnut kernels remain well supplied in the near term, but the global backdrop is becoming more complex. The continuing conflict around the Strait of Hormuz and in the wider Middle East has already pushed war‑risk and emergency conflict surcharges for containers to the USD 2,000–4,000 range on affected routes, with several major carriers applying extra fees to and from Gulf hubs.
While India’s walnut imports from the US, Chile, and China do not all transit through the most exposed corridors, higher bunker costs and network disruptions are lifting all‑in freight rates globally. Recent logistics updates show sharp jumps in freight to some Middle East and Europe lanes and a wider use of emergency risk surcharges. These added logistics costs partly offset the bearish impact of weak Delhi demand by raising replacement costs for future shipments.
On the demand side, Europe remains the key destination for shelled walnut kernels, with established use in confectionery and bakery applications. Although there are no major new data points in the last few days, the medium‑term trend has been for Europe to steadily increase its intake of shelled walnuts, particularly from the US, and to rely on consistent kernel supply for value‑added processing. For Indian exporters, the current price dip in Delhi could therefore become an opportunity to price competitively into Europe if buyers step in for forward coverage.
🌦 Weather & Crop Outlook
Weather in key producing regions is seasonally important but not the immediate driver of this week’s price move. No acute frost or extreme‑weather shock has been reported in the last few days for the main walnut belts relevant to India’s trade flows. Instead, market attention is more focused on logistics risks and demand signals than on near‑term crop stress.
As the Northern Hemisphere transitions through late winter and early spring, traders will nonetheless monitor conditions in California, Chile, and Himalayan India for any flowering or early‑season issues that could alter 2026/27 production expectations. For now, the absence of weather‑related headlines argues for a baseline of stable supply, reinforcing the demand‑led nature of the current correction.
📆 Short-Term Outlook & Trading Ideas
In the next 2–3 weeks, walnut kernel prices in Delhi are likely to remain soft to sideways, with any further downside limited if institutional and export demand begins to re‑emerge. The key recovery trigger will be a visible return of hotel, bakery, and food‑processing buyers, along with stronger export inquiries from Europe and other premium markets.
- Importers / Stockists (India): Use current weakness to selectively replenish high‑quality grades, but avoid aggressive averaging down until there are clearer signs of institutional restocking. Prioritize lots with strong export potential.
- European buyers: Consider staged forward bookings of Indian and Chinese kernels at today’s levels to hedge against potential freight‑driven cost inflation later in the year, especially if energy prices remain elevated due to the regional conflict.
- Shellers and processors: Maintain a balanced position; the combination of soft spot prices and rising logistics risk argues for moderate coverage rather than either under‑ or over‑hedging.
📉 3‑Day Directional View (Indicative)
- Delhi wholesale kernels (INR → EUR equivalent): Bias mildly lower to sideways as long as institutional demand stays muted and stockist selling persists.
- FOB China (Dalian, kernels): Sideways; recent offers have been stable and are less directly exposed to the Delhi sentiment swing.
- FOB India / US for Europe (organic halves): Sideways with slight upward risk if freight and insurance surcharges widen further on Europe‑linked lanes.




