Black Gram Softens as New Summer Crop Arrivals Pressure Spot Values
India’s black gram market eases as new summer arrivals begin, stockists trim bids, and higher acreage and government stocks cap upside in the near term.
Prices & Market Tone
The domestic black gram (urad) market slipped modestly over the week as new summer arrivals started to appear and stockists lowered bids.
- New-crop in Jabalpur (Madhya Pradesh) traded roughly at EUR 983–1,006 per tonne for good quality, with lower grades near EUR 690–724 per tonne (converted from USD).
- Wholesale FAQ grade eased to around EUR 927 per tonne, and SQ grade to around EUR 994 per tonne, both down by about EUR 6 per tonne week-on-week.
- Processed urad dal (split and washed) stayed comparatively firm, broadly indicated between EUR 1,051–1,288 per tonne, backed by steady retail demand.
Overall sentiment is mildly bearish in whole beans, with the physical market adjusting to the prospect of rising domestic arrivals and comfortable official stocks.
Supply & Demand Drivers
Supply-side factors clearly dominate the current price direction.
- Summer-sown black gram area reached 4.60 lakh hectares by 8 May 2026, up from 3.58 lakh hectares a year earlier – an expansion of about 1.02 lakh hectares, reflecting strong farmer confidence at the start of the kharif cycle.
- New summer arrivals have begun in Jabalpur and are also reported in Gujarat, with volumes still limited but expected to build in the coming weeks.
- Government stocks around 4 lakh tonnes add a further supply overhang, effectively capping any sharp price rebound in the near term.
On the demand side, dal millers are buying cautiously, taking advantage of softer prices but avoiding aggressive forward coverage while the arrival curve is still rising. Retail consumption of urad dal remains stable, helping to support processed product differentials over raw beans.
Trade, Imports & Fundamentals
Imports continue to play an important balancing role, even as domestic acreage rises.
- Myanmar-origin black gram for May–June shipment is indicated near EUR 773 per tonne CNF for FAQ and EUR 860 per tonne for SQ.
- Brazilian origin for July–August shipment is quoted around EUR 836 per tonne CNF, underlining sustained global interest in the commodity.
These import values, together with domestic spot levels, help define a soft floor for prices: if Indian spot markets fall too sharply, import parity becomes less attractive, naturally moderating further downside. For now, however, the combination of higher planted area, building arrivals and sizable public stocks leaves the market comfortably supplied.
Weather & Crop Outlook
At this early stage of the summer/kharif season, planting progress and policy stocks are more influential for pricing than short‑term weather fluctuations.
- The expanded sown area strongly suggests potential for higher overall output versus last year, assuming broadly normal weather through June–October.
- Given that arrivals have only just started, any extended spell of adverse weather could still alter yield prospects later in the season, but for now such risks are not yet being strongly priced in.
Market participants will closely monitor the pace of arrivals through late May and June as a practical indicator of crop performance and farmer selling behaviour.
Short-Term Forecast & Trading Outlook
With new-crop arrivals set to accelerate into late May and June and official stocks ample, the near‑term price bias for whole black gram remains gently downward.
- Spot bean prices could soften by a further EUR 12–18 per tonne over the next fortnight if arrivals build quickly and dal miller buying remains measured.
- Upside recovery potential appears limited in the short run due to higher acreage and government stock overhang, barring a sudden demand spike or logistical disruption.
Practical Pointers for Market Participants
- Millers: Consider staggered buying rather than front‑loading coverage, using any short‑term price dips as opportunities while monitoring arrival pace and quality.
- Stockists: Avoid heavy long positions in whole beans until the market has absorbed the initial arrival wave and policy signals on stock release become clearer.
- Importers: Continuously recheck CNF–domestic parity; falling domestic prices could narrow import incentives, especially for higher‑priced SQ cargoes.
3-Day Directional Outlook (EUR, indicative)
- Key wholesale markets (beans): Slightly softer bias; narrow declines expected as arrivals slowly increase.
- Dal markets (processed urad): Largely stable; minor adjustments possible but supported by steady retail offtake.
- Import parity levels: Stable to marginally pressured if domestic beans ease further, but still providing a medium‑term reference floor.