CMB Emblem
China Pumpkin Seeds: Firm Old-Crop Market Ahead of Stable New Season

China Pumpkin Seeds: Firm Old-Crop Market Ahead of Stable New Season

CMB
CMB News Editorial
Editorial Desk

China’s pumpkin seed market in May 2026: firm, regionally split prices, low stocks, reduced acreage in Xinjiang/Inner Mongolia, and a steady near-term outlook.

Chinese pumpkin seed prices remain firm and regionally diverging as traders hold most remaining old-crop stocks, while new-season sowing has been completed under largely stable weather. With slightly reduced acreage in Xinjiang and parts of Inner Mongolia against overall stable production potential, prices are expected to stay supported until new crop arrives in September–October. China’s pumpkin seed market is currently driven more by stock distribution and regional dynamics than by weather shocks. Old-crop inventories are concentrated in traders’ hands, with Xinjiang showing stronger prices on smooth destocking and robust de-hulling demand, while Inner Mongolia trades more calmly and Gansu is close to finishing its old-crop business. New plantings are complete across main origins, seedlings are developing well, and only minor frost-related replanting into sunflower is reported. In this context, the market is likely to hold a firmer bias into Q3, before a possible correction when new crop sells in volume.

Prices & Regional Market Tone

Recent FOB Beijing offers for Chinese pumpkin seed kernels confirm a broadly firm but not explosive price environment, with only marginal week‑to‑week moves. Organic shine skin AA stands around 3.51–3.53 EUR/kg, while conventional shine skin AA trades near 3.34–3.36 EUR/kg. Shine skin A+ in Beijing is indicated at about 2.37 EUR/kg, and GWS AA around 2.92 EUR/kg, both slightly above mid‑May levels, reflecting a mild bullish undercurrent rather than a sharp rally.

Regional feedback shows a clear price split. Xinjiang is leading the upside: old-crop seed is being cleared smoothly, de-hulling demand is healthy, and acreage cuts in Tacheng and Changji support higher farmer and trader price ideas. By contrast, Inner Mongolia reports more balanced buying and selling, with modest increases in raw material costs but flat roasting prices. In Gansu, most old-crop transactions have now concluded, leaving limited spot liquidity and a generally steady tone.

BASIC
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 %
Find the full table with current prices and trends on CMBroker.
Open Charts →

Supply, Demand & Planting Progress

Old-crop stocks are now largely in the hands of traders, with pronounced regional price differentials. Xinjiang’s destocking is progressing well as processors maintain strong demand for de-hulling material, enabling merchants to defend higher prices. In Inner Mongolia, trade flows are more moderate: raw material values have edged up, but finished roasted goods have not followed, indicating balanced supply and a more cautious downstream demand profile. Gansu is effectively at the tail end of old-crop trading, implying limited residual pressure from that origin.

New-season planting has been completed across all major pumpkin seed areas. Early-sown “gourd” fields show good emergence and healthy seedling stands, indicating a solid production base. A brief frost event prompted some fields to switch to sunflower, but the overall impact on total pumpkin acreage is minor. More structurally, acreage in Tacheng and Changji (Xinjiang) and in parts of Bayannur (Inner Mongolia) has been reduced, while other producing areas have maintained near-normal planting scales. This points to slightly lower potential supply from the northwest core but no systemic shortage.

Fundamentals & Weather Outlook

Fundamentals currently combine low but concentrated inventories, selectively reduced acreage, and generally favourable growing conditions. With field damage assessed as light and seedling growth stable, full-season production expectations remain broadly steady despite localized cuts. In practice, this means the near-term market is driven more by the tightness of commercial holdings and by traders’ willingness to sell than by crop risk.

Short-term weather across northwestern and northern China is seasonally warm to hot with mostly dry to fair conditions, supporting field management and early vegetative growth. Forecasts for Gansu and northern China indicate daytime highs largely in the low‑ to mid‑20s °C with limited rainfall, while outlooks for Xinjiang point to warmer-than-normal temperatures but no immediate extreme weather episode. This keeps weather as a neutral-to-slightly-supportive factor for the next week, with no clear threat to yield formation in the critical early stages.

Price Outlook & Trading Strategy

Market participants broadly expect prices to stay firm into the arrival of new crop, given lean residual stocks and reduced acreage in key regions. With new seed from Dengkou (Inner Mongolia) expected to reach the market from early September and Xinjiang–Gansu supplies concentrated in October, a meaningful downward adjustment is unlikely before Q4 unless export demand softens sharply. Once 2026/27 new crop becomes available in volume during September–October, a phase of price correction or consolidation is likely, provided yields track current stable expectations.

  • Buyers (roasters, importers): Consider staggered coverage through late summer, avoiding over‑reliance on spot purchases from Xinjiang where prices are firmest. Use any brief dips in trader offers to extend coverage into early Q4, but avoid chasing rallies ahead of new-crop clarity.
  • Processors in origin: Maintain disciplined procurement of raw seeds, especially in Xinjiang and Bayannur, where acreage cuts could support basis levels. Lock in processing margins on higher-grade shine-skin and organic material while demand is skewed to these segments.
  • Traders: With inventories relatively low and concentrated, there is room to defend current levels in the short term, but be prepared for faster-than-usual price normalization from September onward if new-crop yields meet expectations.

3‑Day Directional Outlook (CN Focus)

  • FOB Beijing (shine skin AA, GWS AA): Stable to slightly firm over the next three days, as traders continue to hold limited old-crop stocks and demand remains largely hand‑to‑mouth.
  • Xinjiang origin (raw seed for de-hulling): Slight upward bias maintained in the near term, reflecting ongoing smooth destocking and reduced local acreage.
  • Inner Mongolia & Gansu: Mostly stable pricing, with Gansu increasingly inactive on old crop and Inner Mongolia balanced between modestly stronger raw material costs and flat finished goods prices.
BASIC
Live Chart
Find the interactive chart on CMBroker.
Open Charts →
PREMIUM
AI Agent
What's driving the chilli premium right now?
Tight Guntur stocks, firm export demand from EU and lower Andhra arrivals — full breakdown in your dashboard.
Ask the CMB AI about prices, market drivers and trade flows — trained on our newsroom data.
Open AI Agent →