Indian Procurement Drive Tightens Wheat Market Despite Larger Crop

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India’s aggressive wheat procurement and relaxed quality norms are tightening local supplies and underpinning a mildly firmer global tone, despite a nominally larger 2025/26 crop. Domestic prices in key Indian hubs have rebounded after weather-driven volatility, while global futures have eased slightly on profit-taking but remain underpinned by earlier weather and geopolitical risks.

India’s campaign is reshaping near-term physical flows: government purchases have already surpassed 21.7 million tonnes, supported by expanded quality tolerances that are pulling weather-affected grain into the system. This is occurring against a backdrop of firm demand from flour mills and stockists and broadly stable but directionally softer futures in the US and EU. For European buyers, the key question is not Indian output volume but exportable surplus and quality mix, which will only become clearer once final crop estimates are confirmed in May.

📈 Prices & Market Mood

In India, wholesale wheat prices in Haryana rebounded to around €30–31/100 kg equivalent after a brief dip, following a recent high near €31–32. Mumbai flour-mill delivery values have firmed similarly, while premium Lokwan and Sharbati grades remain significantly higher, reflecting strong consumer demand for quality grain and limited selling at lower levels.

Internationally, benchmark futures have softened modestly after a weather- and risk-driven rally earlier in April. US SRW wheat on CBOT and Euronext milling wheat both edged lower at the end of last week on profit taking, with front Euronext contracts around €195/t. Nonetheless, price action remains broadly constructive versus early-year lows, with speculative length now closer to neutral, limiting immediate downside from long liquidation.

🌍 Supply, Demand & Policy Drivers

India has expanded wheat area by roughly 600,000 hectares to 33.4 million hectares, lifting headline production estimates to about 115 million tonnes, versus 109.3 million tonnes last year. Some analysts still see potential up to around 120 million tonnes, but unseasonal rains and hail in Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Haryana and Punjab have introduced material quality risk and uncertainty around final output.

To stabilise farm incomes and secure supplies, the government has relaxed procurement norms nationwide. Colour-damaged grain is now widely accepted, and tolerance for broken and damaged kernels has been increased from 6% to 20%. This policy has accelerated state buying: Haryana is on track to meet its 7.5 million tonne target within days, Madhya Pradesh has lifted its target from 7.8 to 10 million tonnes, and Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh are targeting 2.35 and 1 million tonnes respectively.

As of 1 April, India’s central pool already held about 18.2 million tonnes of old-crop wheat, implying total post-harvest availability around 55.6 million tonnes after 30 June. On paper this secures domestic needs, but the high share of weather-affected grain and still-evolving procurement data mean the size and quality of any exportable surplus remain highly uncertain. Meanwhile, strong buying interest from flour mills, roller mills and stockists is keeping the physical market tight.

📊 Global Benchmarks & Cash Market Context

While India’s market is firming, global reference prices have been consolidating. Recent commentary indicates US and European wheat futures slipped slightly late last week, with Paris milling wheat near €195/t and Chicago contracts easing after a multi-month uptrend. The move reflects profit-taking more than a fundamental shift, with earlier support from US weather worries and geopolitical tensions in key exporting regions still in play.

Physical indications from key exporting hubs show competitive Black Sea and EU offers: FOB Black Sea 11–12.5% protein wheat is broadly in the €170–190/t range, French 11% protein milling wheat around the mid-€200s/t equivalent, and US-origin wheat near €190–200/t, depending on grade and location. Against this backdrop, India’s internal firmness and policy caution on exports suggest limited near-term downward pressure on seaborne values from Indian supply.

Origin / Type Location & Terms Indicative Price (EUR/t) Trend vs mid-April
US wheat, 11.5% protein FOB US Gulf (CBOT-linked) ≈€175–190 Slightly softer
French wheat, 11.0% protein FOB Rouen ≈€245–270 Marginally lower
Ukrainian wheat, 11.0–12.5% protein FOB Odesa ≈€155–185 Mostly steady

🌦️ Weather & Procurement Outlook in India

The Indian wheat belt has already endured unseasonal rains and hail, which damaged standing crops and increased the share of discoloured and broken grains. This event is the key reason behind the relaxation of procurement norms and is likely to leave a lasting mark on this season’s quality profile, even if aggregate tonnage remains strong.

Late-April forecasts point to above-normal temperatures and episodic heatwave conditions across parts of north and central India. While most wheat is harvested or close to maturity, lingering heat could still affect late fields, post-harvest handling and storage conditions for both farmers and procurement agencies. Any further localised storms would exacerbate quality concerns and reinforce the current policy bias toward absorbing sub-standard grain into public stocks.

📆 Short-Term Price & Trading Outlook

Market participants within India expect domestic wheat prices to firm by another €0.50–0.65 per 100 kg in the near term, driven by continued government procurement and vigorous demand from flour mills and stockists. The main uncertainty is whether procurement volumes can sustain their current pace once peak harvest flows taper off, especially in states where arrivals have lagged.

For global markets, India’s stance implies that its exportable surplus will remain constrained and of mixed quality at least until official crop and procurement statistics are updated in May. With futures in the US and EU consolidating near technical support after a months-long recovery, downside seems limited unless Northern Hemisphere weather improves sharply and geopolitical risk eases. Conversely, any negative surprise in Indian or Black Sea supply could quickly re-ignite upside momentum.

📌 Trading Considerations

  • Importers in the Middle East, Africa and Asia: Use current dips in CBOT and Euronext futures to layer in coverage for Q3–Q4 2026, but keep some flexibility for quality premiums given India’s damaged crop profile.
  • European millers: Hedge a portion of 2026/27 needs on Euronext around current levels (~€195/t front month), with optionality to add on further setbacks if Northern Hemisphere weather improves.
  • Producers/exporters: Consider forward selling a share of expected output into the recent rally while retaining weather and geopolitical upside via options or conservative hedge ratios.

📍 3-Day Directional Outlook (EUR-based)

  • CBOT SRW (EUR/t): Mildly firmer to sideways, as the market balances profit-taking against ongoing supply and weather risks.
  • Euronext milling wheat (EUR/t): Sideways with a slight upward bias around €190–200/t, tracking broader risk sentiment and US price moves.
  • Black Sea FOB 11–12.5% wheat (EUR/t): Largely steady, with any additional Indian export constraints offering modest support.