Chickpea Market Edges Higher but MSP Gap Caps Upside

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Chickpea prices in India have staged a modest recovery, but a wide gap to the Minimum Support Price (MSP) and ample imported stocks are keeping the market confined to a narrow trading range for now.

After several sessions of weakness, the chickpea market in Delhi has firmed slightly as dal processing mills stepped up coverage at lower price levels, while stockists reduced selling pressure. Domestic prices in key producing states remain more than 10% below MSP, and government procurement is still limited relative to arrivals. Quiet support is coming from below-normal arrivals in parts of western and southern India, but elevated imports at ports and cautious industrial demand are capping any strong upside move.

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📈 Prices & Spreads

In Delhi’s wholesale market, new Rajasthan-origin chickpeas are quoted around the equivalent of EUR 0.80–0.81 per kg, while new-crop Madhya Pradesh-origin lots are trading slightly lower near EUR 0.79–0.80 per kg. Jaipur-line material has also gained modestly, mirroring the Delhi benchmark with a day-on-day uptick of roughly EUR 0.007 per kg.

The recovery has been driven more by reduced selling from stockists at lower levels than by any broad-based demand surge. Dal mills are restricting purchases to immediate processing needs, indicating that current spot prices still do not provide comfortable crushing margins. On the export side, recent FOB offers from New Delhi show Indian chickpeas 42–44 count around EUR 0.98/kg, with smaller sizes priced down to roughly EUR 0.86/kg, while comparable Mexican-origin 42–44 count is offered near EUR 1.24/kg, maintaining India’s discount in global markets.

🌍 Supply & Demand Drivers

Arrivals from major producing centers in Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan are flowing at a steady daily pace, ensuring adequate spot availability. However, arrivals from Gujarat, Karnataka, and Maharashtra are notably below last season’s levels, which is lending quiet support and helping to stabilize prices after the recent soft patch.

Despite the ongoing harvest flow, domestic prices in producing markets continue to trade more than 10% below the MSP of roughly EUR 0.85 per kg equivalent, a discount that has persisted for several weeks. Government procurement so far is estimated at around 100,000 tonnes, with expectations that buying in Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan will gradually pick up. Still, this volume is modest compared with total market arrivals and has not yet been sufficient to rebalance the supply overhang.

On the import side, Australia-origin chickpeas are being quoted around EUR 0.56 per kg CIF in containers for April–May shipment, and about EUR 0.52 per kg in bulk vessel lots, while Tanzania-origin cargoes are steady near EUR 0.54 per kg CIF on the west coast. Elevated imported stocks at Indian ports continue to weigh on domestic price potential, even as yellow peas imports this season are running lower than last year, a factor that may gradually redirect some industrial demand back toward chickpeas.

📊 Fundamentals & Margins

The core fundamental feature of the current market is the persistent gap between domestic spot prices and the MSP. With mandi prices more than 10% below the government floor, farmers’ selling remains price-sensitive, but the combination of steady arrivals and limited state procurement keeps the market well supplied. This structural discount also deters aggressive speculative buying, as upside is constrained until there is either larger-scale procurement or a material shift in demand.

Processing margins for dal mills remain tight, explaining why mills are purchasing only on a hand-to-mouth basis. The presence of relatively cheap imported chickpeas also caps the ability of domestic sellers to push through higher prices. At the same time, lower yellow peas import volumes are a medium-term supportive factor, as feed and processing demand may increasingly pivot toward chickpeas if price relationships become more favorable.

📆 Short-Term Outlook & Weather

Market participants broadly expect chickpea prices to oscillate within a narrow range of roughly EUR 0.007–0.015 per kg (equivalent to USD 0.54–1.08 per quintal) over the next two to three weeks. Given the current domestic discount to MSP, ample imported stocks and cautious mill buying, the probability of a sharp, sustained rally in the near term is low.

With the main rabi harvest largely concluded, weather is no longer a primary driver for the immediate supply situation in India’s key chickpea belts. Barring any unexpected logistical disruptions or a sudden acceleration in government procurement, the market is likely to remain rangebound, with periodic technical rebounds when stockists hold back sales at lower levels.

💡 Trading Outlook

  • For importers and large buyers: Use current dips below MSP-linked value as an opportunity for gradual coverage, but avoid chasing rallies given the import overhang and limited government buying so far.
  • For domestic stockists: Maintain disciplined selling; holding back at intraday lows has proven effective in supporting small price recoveries, but be mindful that high port stocks restrict significant upside.
  • For processors (dal mills): Continue just-in-time purchasing until margins improve or yellow peas prices tighten further against chickpeas, which could justify locking in slightly longer coverage.

📍 3‑Day Price Indication (Directional, in EUR)

Market Product Current Level (approx.) 3‑Day Bias
Delhi (mandi) New crop desi chickpeas ≈ EUR 0.79–0.81/kg Slightly firm / rangebound
New Delhi (FOB) Chickpeas 42–44 count ≈ EUR 0.98/kg Stable to slightly higher
Mexico City (FOB) Chickpeas 42–44 count ≈ EUR 1.24/kg Slightly soft vs. India

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