China’s bean market sees firm white bean exports, softening CN FOB prices and growing demand for organic high‑protein beans into Europe.
Prices & Export Trends
Chinese white bean exports stayed at a high level in Q1 2026, with February shipments around 7,715 tonnes and March totals still exceeding 11,000 tonnes despite partial market volatility. Overall exports are expected to remain stable or increase slightly over the full year as planting area and processing capacity hold firm and logistical conditions normalise.
Current CN FOB prices in Beijing in mid‑May show a mostly sideways to slightly softer pattern over the past three weeks. Large white kidney beans (conventional) are quoted around EUR 2.03/kg FOB, with organic large white kidney beans near EUR 2.06/kg. Dark red kidney beans are trading close to EUR 1.22/kg (conventional) and EUR 1.32/kg (organic), while black kidney beans are about EUR 1.04/kg. Organic mung beans are at roughly EUR 1.55/kg, and conventional mung around EUR 1.46/kg. Organic adzuki beans price near EUR 1.41/kg, with conventional adzuki about EUR 1.33/kg.
Supply, Demand & Product Mix
Feedback from market participants indicates that China’s overall bean export volume is likely to remain stable or expand modestly in 2026. Domestic white bean planting has remained broadly steady, while investments in sorting, cleaning and processing lines are raising output quality and yield. This is supporting reliable export availability even as buyers push for stricter specifications.
On the demand side, export structure is shifting towards higher‑value segments. Organic white beans and high‑protein white beans are gaining share, particularly in Europe where demand for plant‑based protein and certified organic pulses continues to strengthen. This mix upgrade is expected to lift the overall export value of China’s bean shipments in 2026, even if average volumes grow only slightly. Conventional dark red kidney, black beans and mung beans remain important for price‑sensitive markets in Asia, the Middle East and Africa, but value growth is clearly driven by premium categories.
Fundamentals & Weather
Domestic fundamentals currently look balanced. Stable planting area in key bean‑growing regions, combined with better agronomic practices and processing technology, supports a comfortable supply outlook for white beans and related varieties. Exporters report no major constraints on raw material availability at present, although quality differentials and size specifications are increasingly reflected in premiums.
In Northeastern China (e.g. Heilongjiang), where a significant share of high‑quality beans is grown, the 3‑day outlook from 17–19 May points to mostly cloudy, relatively cool conditions with brief, light showers and daytime highs around 18–22°C. Such weather is generally favourable for early growth and fieldwork, adding to expectations of a normal crop development at this stage of the season.
Market & Trading Outlook
- Short‑term price bias (next 1–2 weeks): Slightly bearish to sideways for mainstream CN FOB kidney, mung and adzuki beans, as export volumes remain steady and no immediate weather threat is visible.
- Premium white beans: Limited downside due to strong European demand for organic and high‑protein white beans; quality‑certified lots should retain a notable premium over conventional beans.
- Export volumes 2026: Base case remains for stable to slightly higher exports versus 2025, with value growth outpacing volume growth thanks to the expanding high‑end product mix.
Practical recommendations
- Importers in Europe: Consider layering in purchases of organic and high‑protein white beans at current CN FOB levels, as quality premiums are likely to persist even if the broader bean complex softens.
- Buyers in price‑sensitive markets: Monitor conventional dark red kidney, black and mung beans for small additional price dips; use any further softness to extend coverage into Q3.
- Chinese exporters: Focus on differentiation (organic certification, protein content, traceability) to capture value growth, while managing margin pressure from slightly weaker FOB prices.