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Pigeon Pea Market Finds a Floor as Imports Lose Cost Edge

Pigeon Pea Market Finds a Floor as Imports Lose Cost Edge

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CMB News Editorial
Editorial Desk

Indian pigeon pea prices find a floor as dal mill demand, MSP support and tighter import parity limit downside and point to a cautiously firmer summer.

Indian pigeon pea prices are edging higher after a prolonged soft patch, as strong dal mill demand and reduced import competitiveness start to put a floor under the market. Downside appears limited in the near term, with modest upside risk if Myanmar shipments slow. Indian pigeon pea trade has shifted from structurally weak to cautiously firm. Domestic prices are still below the Minimum Support Price (MSP), but active dal processing demand during the peak wedding and summer consumption season, together with limited government procurement and a narrowing gap between domestic and imported offers, is stabilising sentiment. African-origin imports are firmer and Myanmar’s Lemon and Rangoon grades are holding or rising, pointing to an import cost structure that no longer undercuts Indian supplies. For European buyers of Indian pigeon pea products, the balance of risks for summer points to slightly higher replacement costs.

Prices & Import Parity

Prices for premium Lemon-variety pigeon pea from Myanmar are steady to slightly firmer. At Chennai, Lemon pigeon pea is indicated around EUR 784 per tonne CIF for May–June, while Delhi spot values for the same variety gained roughly EUR 0.49 per quintal to about EUR 69.4–69.8 per quintal. Mumbai’s new-crop Lemon is quoted near EUR 67.2–67.4 per quintal. Rangoon-type pigeon pea in Delhi has moved more sharply, rising about EUR 1.46 per quintal to around EUR 73.9–74.4 per quintal, with Karnataka-origin material close behind at roughly EUR 73.4–74.3 per quintal.

African-origin imports have also firmed. Sudan-origin pigeon pea in Mumbai is up by about EUR 0.49 per quintal to around EUR 59.3 per quintal, with Gajri-grade near EUR 54.8 per quintal and white pigeon pea edging up to roughly EUR 55.7 per quintal. Mozambique white pigeon pea at Nhava Sheva is steady around EUR 617 per tonne CIF for May–June shipments, while Metawara-origin stock has largely cleared from the pipeline. The collective move higher in imported origins is eroding the earlier discount to Indian domestic prices and is now acting as a floor under the local market.

Supply, Demand & Policy

Domestically, pigeon pea prices remain below the government’s MSP, which is around EUR 71.9 per quintal. Procurement at the support price is ongoing across several Indian states but volumes have been modest, suggesting that policy buying is more of a psychological backstop than a dominant physical driver. Arrivals from the Indian crop are steady, and Myanmar continues to ship at a consistent pace, ensuring that pipeline coverage is adequate but not burdensome.

On the demand side, dal processing mills are the key engine of the current firmness. Strong off-take for pigeon pea dal during India’s wedding and summer consumption season is underpinning nearby buying interest, with traders expecting mills to remain active in the short term. In the global context, African shipments from Mozambique and other origins are steady rather than abundant, leaving importers alert to any logistical or policy disruptions. Myanmar remains a critical, but geopolitically sensitive, origin; any interruption there would quickly tighten available import stocks for Indian buyers.

Link to European Pea Prices

European dried pea markets are currently stable. Recent offers show British green peas around EUR 1.02/kg FOB London and marrowfat peas near EUR 1.33/kg, unchanged over the last weeks. Ukrainian green peas (98% purity) are offered near EUR 0.34/kg FCA Odesa, with yellow peas around EUR 0.26/kg. This stability contrasts with the cautiously firmer tone in the Indian pigeon pea complex but underscores that global buyers of pea-based ingredients may face regionally diverging cost trends.

For European buyers sourcing pigeon pea-based products from India, the combination of slightly rising import-origin prices and a domestic Indian market moving closer to MSP suggests some upward pressure on export offers into summer. By contrast, European green and yellow field peas show little immediate price momentum, offering some flexibility for formulators who can partially substitute between pulse types without compromising product specifications.

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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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Short-Term Outlook & Trading Ideas

The near-term outlook (2–4 weeks) for pigeon pea is one of cautious firmness. Government procurement, sustained dal mill demand and a tighter import cost equation should cap downside. The key swing factor is Myanmar’s shipment pace: if flows ease, domestic Indian prices could plausibly gain another EUR 1.7–3.4 per quintal. Any renewed softness would likely require a combination of weaker seasonal demand and renewed undercutting by imported origins, both of which seem unlikely in the immediate horizon.

  • Importers into India: Consider moderating new commitments from Africa and Myanmar at current levels; parity with domestic prices limits margin and increases exposure to any downside correction.
  • Indian millers: Maintain staggered coverage into the wedding and summer consumption window; spot dips are likely to be shallow given the MSP backstop and firmer import costs.
  • European buyers: For pigeon pea-based products, budget for slightly higher summer replacement costs, but evaluate partial substitution with relatively stable green and yellow field peas where technically feasible.

Over the next three trading days, Indian pigeon pea prices are expected to trend sideways to slightly higher in key wholesale markets, with imported African and Myanmar-origin offers holding firm. European dried pea prices in the UK and Black Sea region should remain broadly stable in EUR terms, barring any abrupt currency moves or freight shocks.

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