Now the Onion crop in India is typified by three produces. The two large produces come in December and April and a small crop comes in October. Now the way the cartel operates is as follows.
The December crop is the time when prices normally fall and consumers have a good time with low Onion prices. The cartel keeps a low profile during this time frame where they let the entire December crop flow into the market, thus creating a scenario of low prices and consumer happiness. They wait for the next crop in April. The important thing to note post April is that there is no crop likely till October and the October crop is also a small one.
The Cartel starts mopping up all the supplies that are coming into the markets in the month of April and early May. Farmers get their typical Rs 6-10 per kg as the middleman network keeps the prices down till the time the supply from the farmers is exhausted. On an average the cost to the cartel comes to Rs 8-10 per kg.
Subsequently the aim of the Cartel is to hold on to the produce in their warehouses and cold storages for a period of 3-4 months. The cost of storage comes to around Rs 2-3 per kg and they also account for a 30% wastage in storage. The reason is that the Onion crop degrades very fast as it takes time for the crop to be stored post harvest.
Taking all of this into account the effective cost to the Cartel for the Onions they have bought comes to Rs 13-16 per kg. The supplies are restricted so much that prices start shooting up by early June.
The cartel makes full use of technology in order to track the stocks position and to estimate the kind of levels to which prices can be ramped up by August/September. By this time prices are up by at least 100% over their buying price. It is already evident this year where prices have shot up at the retail level from Rs 15 per kg to Rs 25-30 per kg over the last 4 weeks. By August the cartel starts to offload their stocks into the markets.
They have already made a killing and made a mockery of Stock Market Operators with the sophistication and ease with which they have made money. Typically prices would have peaked out by October which is the time when the small crop comes in-wrote Sandip Sabharwal
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2 replies on “How the Onion Cartel operates in India”
Why this is called cartel??? This is what happens when analysts like Sandip write articles and give opinion on each & every thing just for the sake of it.
Actually What’s wrong in this??? Who’s stopping the farmers from stocking their produce? or a big retailer like Reliance or More buying & stocking onions. Actually these so called cartel ppl will pay outright to farmer as & when they buy them., but had to wait for months to get their dues when they resell it to retailers to More or Reliance or others. They do outright buying, store them, grade them, bear loss due to wastage, finance the retailers and so on. Some time the cost of transportation a kilo produce to last mile store will be more then the actual cost of producing a kilo of onions.
p.s: Not related to onion industry, but know somethings from a friend who deals with it.
Good observation.