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Indian Chickpeas Edge Higher as Government Buying Tightens Spot Supplies

Indian Chickpeas Edge Higher as Government Buying Tightens Spot Supplies

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CMB News Editorial
Editorial Desk

Indian chickpea prices firm on strong mill demand, slower arrivals and government procurement. Global supplies steady but not cheap; outlook mildly bullish into June.

Indian chickpea prices are grinding higher as firm dal-mill demand collides with slowing arrivals and stepped-up government procurement, while global supplies from Australia and Tanzania remain available but not aggressively priced. Sub-MSP origin values and structurally weaker yellow pea imports point to a gradually more supportive price environment into early June. Chickpea trading across major Indian centres has turned noticeably firmer. Spot prices in Delhi and Hapur have risen on the back of steady mill buying and moderation in daily arrivals from Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh. At the same time, the central government has extended and expanded procurement in key states, gradually absorbing surplus and reducing producer selling pressure. Internationally, Australian and Tanzanian offers are steady-to-firm rather than cheap, and yellow pea imports remain constrained by a 30% duty and higher landed costs, supporting substitution into chickpeas over the medium term.

Prices & Current Market Tone

Domestic spot prices in Delhi for Rajasthan-origin chickpeas are quoted around $59.28–$59.54 per 100 kg, with Madhya Pradesh-origin material at $58.75–$58.96. Jaipur-line and Hapur markets show similar gains of about $0.53 per 100 kg on the day, confirming a broad-based firming across northern India. Producer-centre prices, however, still sit below the government Minimum Support Price (MSP) of about $62.14 per 100 kg, underlining that this is an early-stage up-move rather than a fully bullish breakout.

Converted into export-oriented metrics, recent New Delhi FCA offers for Indian chickpeas range roughly from EUR 0.75–0.95/kg depending on calibre, with FOB quotes around EUR 0.86–0.98/kg. Mexican origin remains a premium alternative, with large-size chickpeas around EUR 1.18/kg FOB Mexico City. Australian chickpeas in containers are indicated at about $614 per tonne CIF for May–June and $625 for new-crop November–December, while Tanzanian material has firmed to roughly $593 per tonne CIF, pointing to a mild upward bias in global values rather than aggressive discounting.

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Market Data Table
Schwarzer Pfeffer6.850 €/t+2,3 %
Koriander1.240 €/t−0,8 %
Kreuzkümmel2.100 €/t+1,5 %
Zimt (Cassia)8.900 €/t+0,4 %
Kurkuma3.200 €/t−1,2 %
Kardamom grün18.500 €/t+3,1 %
Ingwer (getr.)1.850 €/t+0,9 %
Chili (getr.)2.750 €/t−0,5 %
Schwarzer Pfeffer6.850 €/t+2,3 %
Koriander1.240 €/t−0,8 %
Kreuzkümmel2.100 €/t+1,5 %
Zimt (Cassia)8.900 €/t+0,4 %
Kurkuma3.200 €/t−1,2 %
Kardamom grün18.500 €/t+3,1 %
Ingwer (getr.)1.850 €/t+0,9 %
Chili (getr.)2.750 €/t−0,5 %
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Supply & Demand Drivers

On the supply side, the most important shift is the slowing pace of arrivals from Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh, India’s two largest chickpea-growing states. Fresh inflows into wholesale markets in Gujarat, Karnataka and Maharashtra have eased compared with previous weeks, signalling that the bulk of the rabi crop has already been marketed. At the same time, government procurement has surpassed 600,000 tonnes in the current rabi season, with the deadline extended and volumes raised for Maharashtra, effectively removing part of the surplus from open markets.

Demand is being led by the dal-processing sector, which has maintained firm offtake as prices remain below MSP and relatively attractive versus substitutes. Structurally, a key bullish element is the decline in yellow pea imports: a 30% import duty and a weaker rupee mean yellow peas are only competitive at landed values above domestic chickpeas. Recent policy notifications confirm that the elevated duty on yellow peas will remain in place into the next fiscal year, reinforcing the medium-term shift towards greater reliance on domestic chickpeas for both direct consumption and splitting.

Fundamentals & International Context

Fundamentally, the market sits at an inflection point where sub-MSP prices, tightening spot availability and government procurement intersect. Producer prices still below MSP have justified state intervention, but as official buying accumulates and arrivals taper, private trade has less incentive to pressure bids lower. This gradually improves the bargaining position of farmers and supports a slow grind higher for spot markets rather than a rapid spike.

Globally, the supply picture is supportive without being overtly tight. Australia continues to ship chickpeas into South Asia, but current and forward CIF values around $614–$625 per tonne suggest exporters are not in a hurry to discount. Tanzania’s market has already shown early firmness, a pattern that historically foreshadows tighter availability during July–September, just as India’s import demand typically rises ahead of the festival season. With yellow pea inflows constrained and global chickpea exporters not offering deep discounts, international markets are likely to underpin, not cap, Indian price gains in the coming months.

Weather & Near-Term Risks

Weather in India’s chickpea belt (Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and neighbouring states) is now less critical for the harvested rabi crop, but lingering warmth and dryness can still affect late-harvested fields and post-harvest quality. Earlier in the season, concerns about warm and dry conditions had raised questions about yield and grain filling, though current market behaviour suggests that overall production has been adequate but not burdensome.

Looking ahead, the main weather-sensitive risk shifts to potential monsoon anomalies that could influence planting decisions for the next cycle or affect logistical flows. However, for the next 2–4 weeks, supply dynamics will be driven more by marketing behaviour, procurement pace and policy signals than by immediate weather shocks. Logistical bottlenecks or unexpected policy shifts on imports remain the more prominent short-term risks to watch.

Price Outlook (2–4 Weeks)

Over the next two to four weeks, chickpea prices in India are expected to inch higher as wholesale arrivals continue to decline and dal-mill procurement remains steady. The $60–$63 per 100 kg range at producer wholesale markets appears achievable by early June under current conditions, implying modest appreciation from current sub-MSP levels rather than a sharp rally. For European and other international buyers, this translates into limited downside and a bias towards slightly firmer EUR-denominated import costs.

Australian and Tanzanian supply should remain available but, given their current pricing, these origins will likely track any upward move in Indian benchmarks rather than undercut them significantly. The combination of lower yellow pea imports, active government procurement and firm processing demand creates a floor under the market that was absent three months ago. Barring a major policy reversal or unexpected import surge, the near-term balance of risks leans mildly bullish.

💹 Trading Outlook & Recommendations

  • Importers in Europe and MENA: Consider advancing purchases for June–July shipment, as current EUR prices still reflect sub-MSP Indian origins and may look attractive if the domestic move towards $60–$63/100 kg materialises.
  • Indian millers and domestic buyers: Use any short-lived dips from localised selling or basis shifts to extend coverage into early June, rather than waiting for deeper corrections that fundamentals do not currently justify.
  • Exporters in India: Monitor government procurement pace and yellow pea import policy closely; maintaining moderate long coverage appears prudent, but avoid overcommitting volumes before festival-season demand signals and global offers from Australia/Tanzania become clearer.

3-Day Directional Outlook (in EUR terms)

  • India (New Delhi FCA): Slightly firmer bias; chickpea offers around EUR 0.75–0.95/kg likely to hold or edge up by 1–2% as arrivals slow and procurement continues.
  • India (FOB exports): Stable to marginally higher; EUR 0.86–0.98/kg expected as export parity adjusts to domestic firmness and steady overseas interest.
  • Mexico (FOB): Broadly stable at premium levels near EUR 0.77–1.18/kg, with limited immediate pressure to adjust given Mexico’s higher-cost position versus Indian origin.
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