Lentil Market Holds Firm as Costly Asian Pulses Set a Price Floor

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Global lentil prices are holding broadly firm, supported indirectly by tightening Asian pulse markets and structurally higher replacement costs for India. Tight black gram availability and costly Myanmar-origin supplies are preventing deeper corrections across the wider pulse complex, limiting downside risk for lentils and other substitutable pulses.

Lentil trade flows into South Asia are unfolding against this backdrop of constrained government buffers and importer–processor standoffs in India’s black gram segment. While lentils are not at the centre of this specific squeeze, the same import-parity dynamics and seasonal demand patterns help underpin current price levels. With Canadian and Chinese FOB values largely steady in recent weeks, and no significant weather or policy shock visible in the very short term, the market is likely to stay range‑bound, with a mild upward bias if Asian pulse tightness persists.

📈 Prices & Spreads

Current export benchmarks in EUR (approximate conversions from recent FOB indications) show a two‑tier lentil market:

Origin / Type Location / Terms Latest Price (EUR/kg) 1–3 Week Change (EUR/kg)
Canada Red “Football” FOB Ottawa ≈2.39 ≈0.00
Canada Laird Green FOB Ottawa ≈1.62 ≈0.00
Canada Eston Green FOB Ottawa ≈1.53 ≈0.00
China Small Green (conventional) FOB Beijing ≈1.06 ≈‑0.02
China Small Green (organic) FOB Beijing ≈1.14 ≈‑0.02

Canadian red football lentils remain at a clear premium over green types, while Chinese small greens offer a lower‑priced alternative for value‑focused buyers. Week‑on‑week moves are minimal: Canadian quotes have been flat since late March, while Chinese small greens have eased only fractionally, reflecting a broadly stable global price structure.

🌍 Supply, Demand & Pulse-Complex Linkages

India’s black gram market has steadied after a brief softening, with prices now supported by costlier Myanmar-origin supplies and weakening import economics. Importers face a squeeze: they are paying more for Myanmar black gram but cannot fully pass on these costs to dal mills, which has slowed new import contracting and is expected to tighten forward supply. At the same time, India’s government holds only around 80,000 tonnes of black gram against a 350,000‑tonne buffer target, limiting its ability to cap prices via stock releases.

This tightening in black gram and the broader South and Southeast Asian pulse complex creates an indirect floor for lentils. As one of the key alternative pulses in Indian and regional diets, lentils benefit from the higher price umbrella set by black gram and other pulses, especially when domestic arrivals in India are thinning and seasonal consumption—for example, papad manufacturing demand for split black gram—remains resilient. India’s extension of free import policies for selected pulses and ongoing MSP-backed procurement of lentils in major states help maintain offtake and constrain downside at farm level.

📊 Fundamentals & Weather Outlook

Canada and China continue to anchor export availability. Canada’s balance sheet heading into 2026/27 is described as comfortable but not burdensome, implying no acute shortage yet little incentive for aggressive discounting. Chinese origins, especially small green lentils, provide competitively priced volume but have shown only marginal softening, reinforcing the sense of a well‑supplied yet firm global market.

Weather across the Canadian Prairies remains seasonally volatile, with late snow events in parts of Saskatchewan but no immediate indication of a widespread production threat. Early spring moisture and temperature swings are typical, and current information does not justify a weather‑driven risk premium for new‑crop lentils. Broader North American forecasts point to a mix of chilly and warm patterns in April, but market attention remains focused on currency moves and freight rather than weather at this very early stage.

📌 Short-Term Outlook & Trading Recommendations

Over the next 2–4 weeks, pulse‑complex dynamics suggest a range‑bound lentil market with a mild upward bias, particularly if Myanmar black gram prices continue to firm and Indian dal mills are forced to step up purchases to meet seasonal demand. The structurally low Indian black gram buffer and firm replacement costs make a significant downside break in lentil prices unlikely in the near term.

  • Importers / Packagers (EU, MENA): Use current stability in Canadian and Chinese FOB offers to extend nearby coverage, prioritising reds where substitution risk is lower and accepting that substantial discounts are improbable in the short run.
  • Industrial users & retailers: Consider incremental forward bookings in Chinese small green lentils while spreads to Canadian greens remain wide, but avoid overcommitting in expectation of a sharp price correction that is structurally unlikely in the present pulse environment.
  • Producers & exporters: Maintain offer discipline; small tactical discounts on green lentils can stimulate volume without undermining the premium structure for reds, especially while Asian pulse markets remain tight.

📆 3-Day Directional Price Indication (EUR)

  • FOB Ottawa (Canada reds & greens): Stable to slightly firmer; expected move 0 to +1% in EUR terms, mainly currency‑driven.
  • FOB Beijing (China small greens): Mostly stable; expected move ‑1% to +1%, with freight and FX the main swing factors.
  • Delivered EU ports (all types): Flat basis FOB values; any adjustments likely to come from freight and local logistics rather than origin price changes.