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Lentil Market Balances Tight Supply with Sub-MSP Prices in India

Lentil Market Balances Tight Supply with Sub-MSP Prices in India

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CMB News Editorial
Editorial Desk

India’s lentil market is flat but underpinned by tight supply and sub-MSP prices. Overview of prices, supply-demand, imports and 2–4 week outlook.

India’s lentil market is trading sideways but on a firm footing, with structurally tight domestic supply offset by comfortable imports and cautious mill buying. Prices sit below the government’s MSP, limiting farmer selling and pointing to a gradual, rather than sudden, recovery over the next 2–4 weeks. India’s key lentil centres are showing a rare equilibrium: arrivals are below normal after a smaller crop, yet import flows from Canada and Australia and hand-to-mouth buying by dal mills are preventing any sharp price break or rally. Domestic desi lentils in Delhi and Katni are flat on the day, while imported Canadian and Australian lots at ports are broadly steady, indicating overseas sellers are in no hurry to discount. Seasonal demand from eastern consuming states is expected to lend incremental support, but with MSP still above spot levels, the market is more likely to grind higher than to spike.

Prices

Across India, lentil prices were largely unchanged on Thursday. In Delhi, domestic desi lentils held in a narrow band around the high‑USD 70s per quintal, with trade reporting quotes close to USD 79.6–79.9 per quintal, flat day‑on‑day. Canada-origin lentils in containers traded steady near USD 72.8–73.4 per quintal, while Australian-origin cargoes were indicated around USD 72.3–72.6 per quintal.

At Mundra port in Gujarat, Canadian lentils were quoted slightly lower than inland values, roughly USD 69.8–69.9 per quintal, consistent with a well-supplied import pipeline. Katni, a key wholesale hub in Madhya Pradesh, saw domestic desi lentils around USD 78.7–79.0 per quintal, again unchanged. Recent export offers also show modest softness: FOB Canada lentils currently indicate roughly EUR 1.60–2.55/kg equivalent, while Chinese small green types are near EUR 1.13–1.20/kg, underscoring an overall stable but not aggressively bullish global tone.

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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

The domestic fundamental backdrop is structurally tight. Trade participants report total lentil arrivals this season in Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh running below typical seasonal norms, consistent with a lower crop output. This has prevented any heavy liquidation by farmers and kept the physical market from being swamped, despite prices failing to clear the MSP.

On the demand side, dal processing mills remain cautious, buying strictly for nearby requirements rather than building substantial forward coverage. However, consumption demand from Bihar, West Bengal and Assam is increasing as the lentil dal consumption season is active in these states. This regional pull is expected to absorb steady arrivals and port stocks without generating a sharp price spike, creating a slow-burning supportive undercurrent instead.

Fundamentals & Policy

A key feature of the current market is that spot domestic lentil prices remain below India’s Minimum Support Price of roughly USD 82.8 per quintal. This sub-MSP environment signals that farmers are not realising attractive returns at the mandi level, which in turn discourages aggressive selling. In practice, this creates an unofficial supply floor as producers withholding stock help prevent deeper price declines.

At the same time, imported lentils at Indian ports are broadly steady, and there is no sign that major exporters such as Canada or Australia are under pressure to cut offers materially at present. Portside stability, combined with talk of additional Canadian vessels heading to India, implies that import cover will remain adequate. Tariff policy remains a key medium-term risk: any increase in levies on Canadian pulses could tighten the import balance, but for now, comfortable arrivals are capping upside.

Weather & Crop Conditions

The current lentil balance in India largely reflects the outcome of the recent rabi season, with below-par production already baked into available supply. Major producing states such as Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh are now entering the hotter pre-monsoon period, which has limited direct impact on the recently harvested lentil crop but does affect storage conditions and farmer marketing decisions.

With monsoon forecasts still being refined, weather in the next few weeks is not expected to change the near-term physical availability of lentils. Rather, the focus remains on stock management and the pace of offtake into eastern consumption markets. No major weather-related supply shock is currently visible on the 2–4 week horizon.

Short-Term Outlook (2–4 Weeks)

The near-term outlook for lentils in India is cautiously positive. Sub-MSP domestic prices, below-normal arrivals and steady consumption from eastern states combine to form a constructive base. However, this is tempered by comfortable import flows and mills’ reluctance to extend coverage far forward, which together argue against an abrupt rally.

Over the next two to four weeks, the most probable scenario is a slow, grinding firming of domestic prices rather than any sharp directional move. Upside is likely to be incremental as demand gradually tightens the balance, especially if mills sense that domestic supply is not sufficient to absorb consumption without higher bids. Downside risk appears limited as long as MSP remains above spot levels and farmers are unwilling sellers at current prices.

Trading & Procurement Takeaways

  • Mills and processors (India): Maintain hand-to-mouth buying but consider modestly extending coverage into the early monsoon period, as current sub-MSP levels offer relatively favourable procurement terms with limited downside.
  • Importers and traders: Use current portside stability to lock in key Canadian and Australian origins; a gradual firming in domestic values could widen margins if tariffs and freight remain steady.
  • Producers and stockholders: Avoid panic selling below MSP; the combination of tight domestic supply and seasonal demand suggests better pricing opportunities may emerge as we move through the current consumption phase.

3-Day Price Direction Outlook

  • Delhi mandis: Flat to slightly firmer in EUR terms as steady demand meets limited fresh farmer selling.
  • Katni / central India hubs: Largely stable with a mild upward bias if arrivals remain below normal.
  • Indian ports (Canadian/Australian origin): Sideways; current offers are likely to hold, with only minor FX- or freight-driven adjustments expected.
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