Green gram stocks anchor lentil prices in a narrow range

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Indian green gram (mung) prices are locked in a narrow band as large government buffer stocks cap any meaningful upside, while steady domestic consumption prevents sharp declines. For European lentil and mung buyers, this translates into a broadly stable near‑term cost base with only modest basis moves driven by freight and local currency.

India’s key producer markets saw green gram prices largely unchanged this week, with mills buying hand‑to‑mouth and traders resigned to a sideways market. Ample government inventories combined with ongoing harvest arrivals neutralise traditional seasonal tightness, even as green gram’s role as a staple protein in India and diaspora markets keeps underlying demand firm. Parallel offers for lentils from China and Canada show a slightly softer tone in EUR terms versus late March, reinforcing a picture of a well‑supplied global pulse complex rather than a tight market.

📈 Prices & Market Tone

Indian wholesale green gram markets remained broadly stable mid‑week. Across major hubs such as Indore, Jaipur, Jalgaon, Delhi and Akola, bold and chamki grades held in a relatively tight range, with no notable day‑on‑day moves despite active harvest flows and steady consumption.

For reference, current Chinese and Canadian lentil export offers converted to EUR (FOB origin) also point to a soft, sideways market structure, with small week‑on‑week declines in China and flat pricing in Canada.

Origin / Type Spec Price (EUR/kg, FOB) 1 week change (EUR/kg)
China – small green lentils Conv., 99.5% purity ≈1.14 −0.02
China – small green lentils Organic, 99.5% purity ≈1.23 −0.02
Canada – Eston green lentils Conventional ≈1.65 0.00
Canada – Laird green lentils Conventional ≈1.75 0.00
Canada – red “football” lentils Conventional ≈2.58 0.00

🌍 Supply & Demand Drivers

The dominant feature in India’s green gram complex is the central government’s buffer stock of about 780,000 tonnes, the largest single holding within a 2.2 million tonne pulse inventory and still below the 3.5 million tonne strategic target. This volume effectively caps upside because the government can cool any rally through stock releases.

At the same time, fresh arrivals remain adequate as harvest progress continues in key producing states. Dal mills, fully aware of the overhang from public stocks, are limiting purchases to immediate processing needs and avoiding speculative accumulation. Yet, household and institutional demand for green gram as a staple protein is consistent, preventing a disorderly price correction.

📊 Fundamentals & Regional Links

Traders across India report near‑unanimous expectations that a strong upward price move in green gram is unlikely in the short term. The market is effectively in a holding pattern, framed by high government inventories above and a floor set by robust food demand and farmers’ willingness to sell only gradually.

For Europe, Indian green gram wholesale values remain a key benchmark for ethnic food channels and for processors using mung‑based ingredients. With Chinese and Canadian lentil offers also steady to slightly weaker in EUR terms, European buyers operate in a broadly comfortable supply environment, where any firming is more likely to come from logistics or FX than from origin fundamentals.

📆 Short‑Term Outlook (2–4 weeks)

Over the coming 2–4 weeks, Indian green gram prices are expected to remain range‑bound, with no clear catalyst for a breakout either way. The critical factor to watch is the policy path on government stock releases: an active disposal program would add downside pressure, while slower‑than‑expected arrivals in key states could help prices stabilise at the upper end of the current band.

Weather risks are not the primary story in the immediate term, as the current crop is already in the harvest and marketing phase in many regions. Instead, market participants should focus on official procurement volumes at the Minimum Support Price and any signals on public stock rotation into the open market.

💡 Trading & Procurement Recommendations

  • European importers: Use the current stable window to extend coverage modestly for green gram and standard green lentils, focusing on Q2–Q3 needs rather than long‑dated positions.
  • Food manufacturers: Lock in prices on core volumes while maintaining some flexibility to benefit from any policy‑driven dips if India speeds up stock releases.
  • Origin sellers (India/China/Canada): Prepare for price competition in destination markets; differentiate by quality and logistics reliability rather than expecting broad price appreciation.

📍 3‑Day Price Indication (Directional)

  • India – green gram (producer markets): Sideways; tight range with low volatility expected.
  • China – small green lentils, FOB: Slightly soft tone but essentially stable in EUR.
  • Canada – green & red lentils, FOB: Stable; no significant moves anticipated absent external shocks.