Slack demand in pulses and a drop in buying support at higher rates arrested bullish trend in both pulse seeds and pulses in Indore mandis. Tur (Maharashtra) declined by ₹300 to ₹7,200 a quintal, while tur (Madhya Pradesh) was quoted at ₹6,400. Given decline in domestic crop output this year, poor crop report in Myanmar and higher imports, any big fall in tur prices form its current level appears unlikely, said a local pulse trader Shankar Osawa.
Tur dal (full) traded at ₹9,900-10,400 (9,100-9,600 last week), tur dal (sawa no.) ₹9,400-9,600 (8,700-8,900), while tur marka rose to ₹10,500-800 (9,800-10,010).
Urad also declined sharply with urad (bold) at ₹8,000-8,200 (8,500-8,600), while urad (medium) ruled at ₹7,500-7,600. Urad dal (medium) rose to ₹10,100-200 (9,100-9,200), urad dal (bold) at ₹10,300-400 (9,300-9,400), while urad mongar rose to ₹11,700-12,100 (10,500-11,000).
Downtrend also continued in moong with moong (bold) declining by ₹100 to ₹8,000-8,200, while moong (medium) ruled at ₹7,500-7,600. Moong dal (medium) went for ₹9,300-9,500 (up ₹200 from last week), moong dal (bold) ₹9,700-9,900 (up ₹300-400 from last week), while moong mongar ruled at ₹9,800-10,300 a quintal.