NCDEX coriander up over 1% on supply shortage.

Futures contracts of coriander rose over 1% on NCDEX because arrivals in the spot markets of Rajasthan were declining. The most-active July contract traded at 5,120 rupees per 100 kg, up 1.3% from the previous close. In the benchmark market of Kota, the Badami variety of coriander traded at 5,700-5,850 rupees per 100 kg, while the Eagle variety was quoted at 5,900-6,000 rupees. Prices of both varieties were up 200 rupees from previous close. Arrivals in Rajasthan were 3,300 bags (1bag=40kg), down 1,100 bags from the previous day.

India coffee exports during Jan 1- Jun 14.

The Coffee Board of India has finalised its crop estimate for 2015-16 at a record-high of 348,000 tonne, up from 327,000 tonne produced a year ago, but down from previous estimate of 350,000 tn. The board has estimated the output for 2016-17 at 316,700 MT tonne, down 9% on year.

MCX cotton down on high stock, good output hopes.

Futures contracts of cotton fell on MCX due to high stocks and a rise in acreage. The USDA has scaled up its estimate for ending stocks of cotton in India for the season to 13.34 million bales (1USbale=480pound) from 13.24 million bales projected in May. Expectation of a higher production of cotton also weighed on the sentiment. Farmers in the country have sown cotton across 1.41 million ha as of Jun 8, up 42.4% on year. On the MCX, the June contract was at 20,090 rupees per bale (1bale=170kg), down 0.6% from the previous close.

India Dairy body to buy 1,400 tonne maize at e-auction.

The National Cooperative Dairy Federation of India will buy 1,400 tonne maize through a reverse electronic auction on Jun 22. The commodity, used as cattle feed, will be bought on behalf of the Kerala Co-operative Milk Marketing Federation. The National Cooperative Dairy Federation of India, which has nearly 200 dairy cooperatives as members, has developed an online trading platform to purchase feed stock and sell dairy products.

USDA Corn sales higher in latest week.

Corn and soybean export sales increased in the latest week but matched trade forecasts and topped the paces needed to meet the U.S. Department of Agriculture annual forecasts. Old-crop corn sales of 23.7 million bu. were up about 10 million from a week ago, while new-crop sales of about 531,500 bu. were down sharply from a week ago and missed forecasts. Old-crop sales were led by Mexico, Colombia and China, while the new-crop business went to Panama, the French West Indies and Nicaragua.

Bangladesh to import 250,000 tonne rice from Vietnam.

Bangladesh has signed a deal with Vietnam to import 250,000 tonne of rice. Bangladesh will buy 50,000 tonne of parboiled rice at $470 per tonne, and 200,000 tonne of white rice at $430 a tn. The government had earlier planned to buy 1.5 million tonne of grain during the Boro crop season (Nov-May) this year. The floods damaged Boro crops, which would have yielded 600,000 tonne of rice.

India Spot rice prices fall as traders cautious ahead of GST.

Prices of rice fell in the key wholesale markets of the country as traders liquidate stocks fearing demand may be hit after the roll out of GST as a 5% tax on branded flour will be levied. In Haryana Karnal market, prices of 1121 basmati sella rice fell by 100 rupees, and the grain was traded at 5,300-5,400 rupees per 100 kg. Permal raw variety non-basmati rice was traded at 2,800 rupees per 100 kg in Karnal.

Thailand 2.1 million tonnes of inedible rice sold in the latest bidding held.

Around 2.1 million tonnes of inedible rice stored by the state were expected to be sold in the latest bidding held yesterday by the Ministry of Commerce, leaving only a small amount of poor quality grade grain in the government stockpile to be put on sale next month. Offer prices ranged between 2,000-6,700 baht per tonne and depended mostly on how poor the quality of the rice was. However, the offer prices were well above offers in the previous bid of around 4,000 baht a tonne.

Bangladesh Rice stocks fall to six-year low.

The government rice stocks in storage have fallen to the lowest in six years due to an insufficient supply from the ongoing procurement programme. The stock of rice stands at 1,91,000 tonnes till June 13 which in 2009 stood at 5,46,000 tonnes in the Fiscal Year 2009-10. The price of rice has already increased over the last two months which traders and millers attribute to the loss of crops in the haor regions in the Northwestern region of Bangladesh. The price of coarse rice in the capital was ranging at between Tk45 and Tk55 a kilogramme, 5%-10% higher compared to that a month ago.

India Rain expedites sowing of paddy in Punjab.

The early morning showers came as a help for paddy farmers who, as per the government instructions, were allowed to start paddy transplantation. The mild showers continued for almost an hour. Hailstones too were reported from few areas surrounding the city. Estimate an area of 1.80 lakh hectares to come under paddy cultivation in this season, nearly 80,000 hectares area would come under basmati varieties.

India Odisha farmers protest non-procurement of paddy.

Rabi paddy procurement has been paralysed in the backward district as custom millers have stopped work for the past three days as a mark of protest against an order of Odisha Civil Supply Corporation to stop payment of handling charges of Rs 4 per quintal paid to them. Odisha Civil Supply Corporation in its 12 June order discontinued the handling charges paid to the custom millers for delivering the stock of rice at Rice Receiving Centres-cum-Departmental Storage Centres (RRCs-cum-DSCs) and stacking inside the godown. About 2 lakh quintals of Rabi paddy are yet to be procured from farmers. 12.51 lakh quintals of Rabi Paddy have already been purchased in 70 purchasing centers run by 43 Primary Agriculture Cooperative Societies. Delay in procurement of paddy by the state government has become a major problem for the farmers due to the onset of monsoon. They fear that bags of paddy bags stocked at different procurement centres may get spoilt in the rain.

U.S. Wheat rises to six-week high on concerns of dry weather on U.S. crop.

Wheat climbed to its highest since early May with the market on track for a second week of gains as dry weather in parts of North America threatens to reduce yields. Wheat earlier rose to as much as $4.58-1/4 a bushel, the highest since May 2. Wheat is rallying on concerns that recent dry weather will curb the output of the U.S. spring crop. North American spring wheat crops remain too dry and weather forecasters do not expect that to change.

Australia wheat prices at 1-year high on dry weather.

Prices of the new crop wheat for January delivery in Australia touched a one-year high of A$265 a tonne (13,000 rupees) due to concerns over dry weather in the western part of the country. In western Australia, where the new crop has been planted, soil moisture is currently at record low and the weather bureau has forecast high temperature and little or no rainfall next week. The country is already grappling with low output concerns and wheat production in 2017-18 is seen 31% lower on year at 24.2 million tonne.

India Wheat prices, however, were unchanged in major markets.

In Delhi, mill quality wheat was sold at 1,740-1,750 rupees per 100 kg and in Kota, it was quoted at 1,500-1,530 rupees per 100 kg. Markets in Indore were shut, but are likely to re-open on Friday. The July wheat contract on the NCDEX ended at 1,617 rupees per 100 kg, down 0.06% from previous close.