This move is
likely to ease current market tightness and, indirectly, weigh on local rice
prices, sources said. Indian rice
prices have been firm amid supply tightness as Platts assessed India 5% WR at
$357/mt July 3, $18/mt up month on month.
Under a notification released by the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food
and Public Distribution on July 2, 1.6 million mt will be sold to state
governments at Rupee 23,200/mt ($244/mt) until Oct. 31. An additional 3.2
million mt will be auctioned at Rupee 23,900/mt until June 30, 2027. Separately, Food Corporation of India will
sell 25% broken rice to private parties at rates as low as Rupee 26,600/mt for
the Kharif marketing season 2023-24 (October-September). For the 2024-25 season, rice will be sold
at Rupee 28,000/mt, while rice for the 2025-26 season will be auctioned at
Rupee 28,900/mt. “Current local price for 25% WR for Kandla port delivery is
around Rupee 30,000/mt, which means FCI’s old-crop rice will likely be sold at
much lower levels in the domestic market,” a Nagpur-based exporter said. A Delhi-based trader added that the
revised OMSS could soften Indian non-basmati prices as local availability
increases. “We may see further price reductions under OMSS,” the trader
said. Some market participants were more cautious about the
impact.
“The OMSS 2026-27 update is intended to improve
domestic rice availability and contain food inflation through a controlled
release of government stocks,” a Gurgaon-based trader in a multinational
company said. “The main market effect should come from additional availability
of whole rice and broken rice over the coming weeks, especially through
discounted older-crop stocks and the new dynamic pricing mechanism for
brokens.” They further noted that
while this may ease some domestic tightness, strong ethanol demand, limited
paddy availability, and active export demand are expected to continue
supporting the overall rice market.
According to the report, under
the previous policy, FCI offered rice to ethanol players at Rupee 22,500/mt, a
level that has been increased to Rupee 23,200/mt in the current policy until
Oct. 31, which further increases to Rupee 23,900/mt until June 30, 2027. A Delhi-based trader said the immediate
impact will depend on the quality of the older stocks that FCI releases. Before drawing conclusions on prices, it
will be important to sample the supply, the trader said.