Indian small cardamom prices are holding firm on the back of tightening auction arrivals and exceptionally strong export demand, with upside risks if supply tightens further or Guatemala raises offers again.
The cardamom market is currently characterised by a notable divergence between firm producing-centre auctions in Kerala and slight profit-taking at Delhi’s wholesale market. Reduced arrivals at key auctions, a powerful export surge driven by competitive Indian prices versus Guatemala, and seasonally lower inflows are keeping the fundamental balance tight. While some nearby wholesale softening appears to be position-driven, not structural, buyers in Europe, the Gulf and Southeast Asia should assume a still-supportive pricing environment into late April and consider advancing coverage, especially in higher grades and powder.
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📈 Prices & Auction Dynamics
At the 28 March CPA Santhanpara auction in Kerala, average small cardamom prices strengthened to roughly €21.8/kg (about $23.73/kg), up from around €20.5/kg ($22.31/kg) at the 19 March sale. This €1.3/kg increase in less than two weeks came despite arrivals dropping sharply to 10.4 tonnes from 19.4 tonnes previously, highlighting how restricted supply is magnifying price support.
In Delhi’s Kirana wholesale market, the benchmark 7.5 mm hole-grade eased by about €1.0/kg to an estimated €24.4–€25.4/kg (roughly $26.57–$27.63/kg) after a smaller rise in the prior session. This appears more like short-term position adjustment than a change in underlying sentiment, with producing-centre auctions still signalling a firm tone.
🌍 Supply & Demand Drivers
On the supply side, Kerala has entered the summer period, with the seasonal flush receding. Earlier worries over severe crop damage from heavy prior-season rains have not fully materialised, but auction arrivals remain below last year’s levels, tightening near-term availability at primary markets.
Demand is underpinned by exceptional export performance. In the first ten months of India’s 2024–25 financial year, cardamom exports surged to 12,281 tonnes, up 132% year-on-year, with export earnings leaping 160% to around ₹3,019.6 crore. This expansion reflects Indian cardamom’s improved competitiveness after Guatemala, the world’s largest producer, lifted its own price floor, redirecting buying interest towards Indian-origin material in the Gulf, Europe and Southeast Asia.
📊 Spot & Export Price Landscape (EUR)
FOB New Delhi indications (late March) show relatively stable but firm levels across key specifications, broadly consistent with the strong auction backdrop.
| Product (India, FOB New Delhi) | Spec | Latest Price (EUR/kg) | 1–2 Week Change (EUR/kg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cardamom whole | green 6.0–6.5 mm, organic | €16.30 | ≈0 (flat vs mid-March) |
| Cardamom whole | green 6.5–6.8 mm | €21.20 | ≈0 (flat vs mid-March) |
| Cardamom whole | green 7.0–7.2 mm | €22.05 | ≈0 (flat vs mid-March) |
| Cardamom whole | green 7.5 mm | €23.40 | ≈0 (flat vs mid-March) |
| Cardamom whole | green 8 mm | €24.30 | ≈0 (flat vs mid-March) |
| Cardamom powder | organic | €24.25 | ≈0 (flat vs mid-March) |
The narrow week-on-week changes in FOB offers, alongside firmer auctions, suggest exporters remain confident in current price levels despite modest wholesale volatility.
⛅ Weather & Regional Outlook
Kerala’s current summer pattern typically brings higher temperatures and a gradual tightening of moisture conditions ahead of pre-monsoon showers. With the main seasonal flush behind the market, any additional weather-related stress would primarily affect residual pickings and the early stages of the next cycle, rather than triggering an immediate production shock.
Given that fears of severe rain damage have not translated into a collapse in supply, weather remains a secondary, not primary, driver in the very short term. However, persistent heat or delayed pre-monsoon rains could reinforce the already lower arrival trend, lending incremental support to prices in April.
📆 4-Week Market & Trading Outlook
The near-term outlook for Indian small cardamom is cautiously positive. If auction arrivals tighten further or Guatemala lifts prices again, Indian auction averages could migrate toward approximately €23–€24/kg (about $25–$26/kg) over the next four weeks, particularly for better grades.
Export demand is expected to stay robust given the strong pull from Gulf, European and Southeast Asian buyers in food processing, confectionery and beverages. Domestic wholesale corrections like the recent easing in Delhi should be viewed as tactical rather than structural unless accompanied by a sustained recovery in arrivals or a sharp slowdown in export orders.
💡 Trading Recommendations
- Importers (EU, Gulf, SE Asia): Advance coverage for Q2 needs, especially in 7.5–8 mm whole and powder, as auction signals and export flows both argue for limited downside and moderate upside risk.
- Exporters in India: Use current FOB stability to lock in forward sales where possible, but retain some flexibility in case auctions push higher towards the €23–€24/kg range.
- Domestic traders: Treat short-term dips in Delhi wholesale as opportunities to rebuild inventory, provided auction arrivals remain subdued and exports stay strong.
📍 3-Day Directional Price View (EUR)
- Kerala auctions (India): Bias slightly upward to stable; limited arrivals should keep averages near or just above ~€22/kg.
- New Delhi FOB offers: Largely steady for whole grades (6–8 mm) and powder, with a mild upward bias in higher grades if export buying intensifies.
- Key importing hubs (EU/Gulf): Mostly stable landed prices in the very short term, with any moves likely reflecting freight and FX more than origin price shifts.








