Chana futures on National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange (NCDEX) are seen marginally up due to the much awaited festival demand from west and north Indian regions, analysts and traders said. |
"There are signs of emergence of demand from dal mills, particularly from western India," said Yogengra Singh, an analyst at Religare Commodities. The most-active September contract on NCDEX is likely to touch Rs 2,410-2,440 per 100 kg in next six-seven days, said Singh. However, the contract could dip to Rs 2,320 from current level of Rs 2,360 on mild profit booking, he said. |
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Spot prices are likely to remain firm despite likely profit booking in futures market owing to festival demand from dal and flour mills, said Ashok Tomar, a Bikaner-based pulses broker. |
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Today, spot chana in Delhi surged Rs 30 to Rs 2,350 per 100 kg, while in Bikaner, it was trading at Rs 2,270, up Rs 40 from Saturday. |
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"I expect spot chana to rise another Rs 60-65 to Rs 2,340-2,350 per 100 kg in a week," said Tomar. In Delhi, spot chana is expected to touch Rs 2,400 per 100 kg in 4-5 days, on clear signs of festival demand, said Rajesh Garg, a local chana trader. According to Garg, there could be a fall in prices in the short-term as a substantial quantity of chana from warehouses in Delhi's green belt may be offloaded in the spot. |
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The Supreme Court has ordered all buildings constructed in Delhi's green belt to be sealed by September. "However, a robust festival demand can absorb excess stock from these warehouses," Garg added. |
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But in the medium-to-long term, the move could benefit chana prices as it will reduce warehousing capacity, he said. |
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A steady decline of 3,000 tonnes in chana stocks at NCDEX-accredited warehouses since August 1, has eased pressure of very high deliveries. |
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As on Friday, total chana stocks in NCDEX warehouses were nearly 30,300 tonnes. |
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While chana stocks that will become invalid for delivery after September 5 have declined by over 4,700 tonnes in the last three-four weeks, but are still high at over 17,000 tonnes. Any major fall in these stocks in the next few days due to Rs 60-70 premium in spot market, will lead to rise in futures prices. |
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"Hence, buying on every dip will be a good strategy in chana futures," according to an analyst at Karvy Comtrade. |
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According to a technical analyst at Karvy Comtrade, the contract can be bought at around Rs 2,290-2,310 per 100 kg with a target of Rs 2,400-2,430. |
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He said prices may improve in the coming days as the commodity enters its peak demand season from August third-week to September. |
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