News

Indian market pays a premium for green lentils

Dried Lentil
India
Market & Price Trends
Published Nov 3, 2023

Tridge summary

The significant price premium between green and red lentils is justified due to two consecutive years of low pigeon pea production in India. Traders in India believe this year's crop is even smaller than what the government is reporting, leading to an increased demand for green lentils, particularly in the Tamil Nadu market. Additionally, Algeria's purchases of green lentils from Russia, Kazakhstan, and Turkey, as well as Australia's bin-busting crop of red lentils, are contributing factors to the price difference.
Disclaimer: The above summary was generated by a state-of-the-art LLM model and is intended for informational purposes only. It is recommended that readers refer to the original article for more context.

Original content

The current massive price premium between green and red lentils is justified, says a trader of the crop. The premium for large green lentils over reds has averaged US$414 per tonne since the start of the 2023-24 marketing year, according to Stat Publishing. That is more than double last year’s average of $202. Canadian bids as of Oct. 27 were 65 cents per pound for large green lentils versus 37 cents per pound for reds, according to Stat. The excitement surrounding green lentils stems from two consecutive years of dismal pigeon pea production in India. The Indian government estimates this year’s crop at 3.42 million tonnes, slightly above last year’s output of 3.31 million tonnes. Both are about one million tonnes below normal. Traders in Mumbai, India, say it is even worse than what the government is reporting. They think this year’s crop is 25 percent smaller than last year’s, according to Pavan Talwar, president of PKT Associates Inc., a pulse trading company based in New ...
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