Stable but Diverging: Egyptian vs Indian Thyme FOB Price Signals

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The dried thyme market remains broadly stable in mid-March 2026, but price signals from Egypt and India are starting to diverge beneath the calm surface. In Egypt, FOB Cairo offers for conventional dried thyme (crushed leaves) have inched higher to around EUR 1.20/kg, extending a very modest firming trend that has been in place since late February. This gentle uptick comes against the backdrop of Egypt’s fast-growing role as Europe’s leading non‑EU supplier of dried thyme, with exports roughly doubling between 2020 and 2024 and now covering about half of extra‑EU imports. Early-season availability, competitive pricing and strong crushing and steam-sterilisation capacity are keeping Egyptian product attractive for German, French and UK buyers, even as global herb prices have trended higher over the past five years.

By contrast, Indian FOB offers for organic dried thyme out of New Delhi are flat on the week at roughly EUR 4.66/kg, after edging down mildly over the past three weeks. This sideways pattern reflects decent export interest within the broader organic spices and herbs segment, but also some buyer resistance at already elevated price levels and competition from other origins in Mediterranean herbs. Weather conditions in both Cairo and New Delhi are seasonally typical for mid‑March, with no immediate weather shock indicated for the next three days, although hazy and occasionally stormy conditions over North India may delay some logistics. With European demand expected to grow modestly into 2026 and ongoing tightness in Moroccan thyme supplies reported last year, the near‑term bias for Egyptian conventional thyme prices remains slightly upward, while Indian organic thyme may continue to track sideways with a mild soft tone unless fresh demand emerges.

📈 Prices & Market Snapshot

Spot FOB Offers (Converted to EUR)

Conversion assumptions: 1 USD ≈ 0.92 EUR; 1 EGP ≈ 0.029 EUR; 1 INR ≈ 0.011 EUR (rounded, for context only). All transactional reference prices from the user data are treated as EUR-denominated.

Origin Product Spec Organic Location Delivery Latest Price (EUR/kg) Weekly Change (EUR/kg) Weekly Change (%) Market Sentiment Last Update
Egypt (EG) Thyme dried crush leaves No Cairo FOB 1.31 +0.01 +0.8% Slightly firm 2026-03-13
India (IN) Thyme dried crush leaves Yes New Delhi FOB 5.10 0.00 0.0% Sideways 2026-03-13

Recent Price Trend (Last 4 Weeks, EUR/kg)

Date EG Thyme FOB Cairo (conv.) IN Thyme FOB New Delhi (org.)
2026-02-21 1.31 5.14
2026-02-28 1.29 5.12
2026-03-06 1.30 5.10
2026-03-13 1.31 5.10
  • Egypt (conventional): Narrow 1.29–1.31 EUR/kg range over the last four weeks, with a very mild upward bias.
  • India (organic): Gentle easing from 5.14 to 5.10 EUR/kg in late February, then flat for the last week, suggesting a balancing of buyers and sellers.

🌍 Supply, Demand & Trade Context

  • Egypt’s export engine: Egyptian exports of dried thyme to Europe have risen from around 863 tonnes in 2020 to about 1,800 tonnes in 2024 (≈20% CAGR), making Egypt the top non‑EU supplier and covering roughly half of extra‑EU import needs.
  • European demand: The European dried thyme market absorbs about 10.5 thousand tonnes annually, with around 40% sourced from developing countries. Modest but positive growth is projected through 2025–2027 as food inflation eases and consumption of ready meals and Mediterranean-style spice mixes rises.
  • Tightness in competing origins: Recent reports (May 2025) highlighted ongoing supply tightness in Moroccan thyme, which indirectly supports demand for Egyptian and Turkish origins in 2025–26.
  • Organic segment dynamics (India): Global organic spices and herbs demand is growing steadily; India is a major organic herb and spice supplier, though organic categories have been somewhat affected by slower premium spending in Europe before stabilising in 2024–25.
  • Price level comparison: Broader Egyptian thyme export prices are quoted in the range of roughly USD 4.8–7.6/kg (≈4.4–7.0 EUR/kg) on wholesale benchmarks, while the user’s specific crushed-leaf FOB Cairo reference at 1.31 EUR/kg indicates a competitively priced, bulk industrial specification.

🌦️ Weather Outlook & Short-Term Risks (Region Focus: EG, IN)

Egypt – Cairo / Delta & Upper Egypt Corridor

  • 3‑day forecast (Cairo, 14–16 March 2026): Partly sunny to hazy, highs 22–24°C, lows around 12–13°C, with breezy but dry conditions and no significant rainfall expected.
  • Implications for thyme: These are seasonally normal, benign conditions for drying, handling and moving existing stocks. No immediate weather-related yield or quality threats are visible in the very short term.
  • Medium‑term backdrop: Research from Egyptian agronomic studies underscores sensitivity of herbs and aromatic plants to water stress and salinity, highlighting the importance of irrigation management, especially in Upper Egypt. At present there are no widely reported acute weather shocks, keeping supply expectations steady.

India – New Delhi / North India Herb Belt

  • 3‑day forecast (New Delhi, 14–16 March 2026): Hazy and warm with highs 29–32°C; a risk of a morning thunderstorm on 15 March; air quality “very unhealthy” on some days.
  • Implications for thyme: Warm, dry-to-hazy conditions are broadly supportive of drying and storage. Isolated storms may briefly disrupt local logistics or loading schedules, but no widespread crop damage is indicated over the next three days.
  • Organic sector note: India’s broader organic herb and spice production and exports continue to expand, driven by both domestic and export demand, but exporters report that consistent quality, drying and certification remain key differentiators in accessing premium markets.

📊 Fundamentals & Regional Role

Region Role in Global Thyme Trade Key Market Drivers (2025–26)
Egypt (EG) Top non‑EU exporter to Europe; strong in crushed and ground thyme. Export growth ≈20% per year since 2020; competitive prices; improved post‑harvest and sterilisation infrastructure; substitution for tight Moroccan supplies.
India (IN) Smaller player in thyme but important in the wider organic herb and spice segment. Rising global demand for organic herbs; strong domestic processing base; tighter financial conditions for organic consumers in Europe tempering, but not stopping, growth.
  • European buyers are increasingly focused on traceability, residue control and organic certification, benefitting both structured Egyptian exporters and certified Indian suppliers.
  • Processed and blended products (e.g., za’atar and Mediterranean herb mixes) are helping to stabilise thyme demand, even as individual herb prices fluctuate.

📆 3‑Day Regional Price Outlook (FOB, EUR/kg)

Note: Very short‑term forecasts (3 days) are driven primarily by logistics, FX and buyer activity, as no material crop changes occur at this horizon. Weather for EG and IN is benign, so only minor adjustments are expected.

Date Region Product Spec Organic Expected Price Range (EUR/kg, FOB) Directional Bias
2026-03-14 Egypt (EG) Thyme dried crush leaves No 1.30 – 1.32 Slightly firm vs last trade (1.31)
2026-03-15 Egypt (EG) Thyme dried crush leaves No 1.30 – 1.33 Slightly firm
2026-03-16 Egypt (EG) Thyme dried crush leaves No 1.30 – 1.33 Slightly firm / stable
2026-03-14 India (IN) Thyme dried crush leaves Yes 5.05 – 5.15 Sideways at 5.10
2026-03-15 India (IN) Thyme dried crush leaves Yes 5.05 – 5.15 Sideways; minor logistics risk from storms
2026-03-16 India (IN) Thyme dried crush leaves Yes 5.05 – 5.15 Sideways / slightly soft if demand stays quiet

🎯 Trading Outlook (Very Short-Term)

  • Egypt FOB Cairo – conventional thyme (crushed leaves):
    • Bias: slightly bullish within a tight band, supported by firm European demand and Egypt’s strong export position.
    • Buyers with Q2 needs may consider gradual forward coverage while prices remain near the bottom of broader global reference ranges.
  • India FOB New Delhi – organic thyme (crushed leaves):
    • Bias: sideways to mildly soft if no new buying wave appears from Europe or North America.
    • Premiums over conventional remain wide; selective buyers may negotiate minor discounts for volume or flexible shipment windows.