Lentils market: Soft prices but tightening pulse complex risk ahead
Concise lentils market analysis: softer export prices from Canada and China, but firmer black gram in India signals upside risk for the wider pulse complex.
Prices & Market Tone
Recent offers show a modest softening in export lentil values in both Canada and China, reflecting still-comfortable availability and restrained nearby demand.
Prices are converted to EUR using an indicative 1.08 EUR/USD, showing a shallow downtrend over recent weeks rather than a sharp correction. The tone can be described as soft but orderly, with sellers still willing to negotiate nearby positions.
Pulse Complex Context: Black Gram as a Lead Indicator
India’s black gram (urad) market has turned notably firmer across major trading hubs, driven by higher Myanmar origin prices and increased interest from Indian dal mills at previously lower levels. This tightening in a key competing pulse underlines the risk that broader South Asian demand could shift from a buyers’ to a more balanced or even sellers’ market in coming weeks.
At Chennai, FAQ-grade black gram has edged higher to just above USD 92 per quintal, with premium SQ cargoes above USD 100 per quintal for May–June shipment on a C&F basis. Delhi and Mumbai show similar firmness, while polished product in Guntur and Vijayawada has also moved up, indicating that wholesale and processed segments are absorbing higher raw material costs even as end-consumer demand remains somewhat sluggish.
Despite this firmness, Indian dal mills are still buying cautiously rather than aggressively stockpiling, constrained by structurally weaker-than-normal seasonal offtake and good import availability versus last year. This behavior suggests that price support in pulses rests more on supply and import-cost dynamics than on a demand surge—an environment where lentils can stay soft for now, but where any new supply shock would be transmitted quickly.
Fundamentals: Supply, Sowing & Farmer Economics
On the supply side, India’s pulse complex is underpinned by steady Rabi-season black gram arrivals in Andhra Pradesh and an expansion of summer sowings in Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat. Fresh black gram harvest flows are expected by end-May, likely easing some of the current tightness and capping further upside there unless yields disappoint.
Producer prices for black gram in Indian wholesale markets remain below the government’s Minimum Support Price, signaling weak farm-gate price discovery and limited producer bargaining power. This is important for lentils: chronically low realized prices for pulses can eventually discourage planting in marginal areas, tightening medium-term supply for the broader complex. For the next 2–4 weeks, however, the key drivers will be the pace of new crop arrivals and the evolution of Myanmar export offers, which together will set the tone for regional pulse values and, by extension, sentiment in lentils.
For lentils themselves, the recent softening in Canadian and Chinese FOB levels indicates that exportable stocks are adequate and that buyers are still comfortable with coverage. The absence of an immediate supply squeeze contrasts with the firmer black gram picture, suggesting that substitution into lentils could remain limited until relative prices move more decisively.
Weather & Short-Term Outlook
Weather in key pulse regions is entering a seasonally critical phase. In South Asia, attention is shifting to the onset and distribution of early monsoon-related rains, which will influence both the tail end of summer pulses and planting decisions for the next cycle. Any delays or erratic patterns could reinforce risk premia across the pulse complex, including lentils, particularly if they coincide with tighter export availability later in the year.
In Canada, early-season conditions for the upcoming lentil crop will be closely watched by trade, but current export prices do not yet embed a major weather premium. This aligns with the present soft drift in FOB values. Market participants should nonetheless monitor regional forecasts and planting progress, as a weather shock in a major exporter would quickly be transmitted into higher forward values.
Trading Outlook & 3‑Day Directional View
- Importers / Food manufacturers: Use current softness in Canadian and Chinese lentil offers to extend coverage modestly for Q3, but avoid overbuying given still-sluggish downstream demand in parts of Asia.
- Exporters / Producers: Maintain price discipline; with black gram and other pulses firming, deeper discounts on lentils are not warranted unless new-crop prospects improve sharply.
- Traders: Watch Indian summer crop arrivals and Myanmar-origin price moves over the next 2–4 weeks; a stabilization or renewed rise there would be an early signal to turn more constructive on lentils.
3‑day directional indication (EUR-based, FOB):
- China small green lentils (conventional, organic): sideways to slightly softer, as export supply remains comfortable.
- Canadian red and green lentils: broadly sideways, with limited downside as long as related pulse markets (notably black gram) stay supported.