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Nigella Seed Prices Ease Slightly as India and Egypt Head into Hot, Dry Spell

Nigella Seed Prices Ease Slightly as India and Egypt Head into Hot, Dry Spell

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CMB News Editorial
Editorial Desk

Concise Nigella seed market update: latest India & Egypt bulk prices in EUR, supply signals, weather in Cairo/New Delhi and 3‑day directional outlook.

Nigella seed export prices from India and Egypt are broadly stable with a slight softening versus late April, as steady export availability meets only moderate spot buying. Egyptian Sortex material still commands a premium over Indian origin, but that premium has narrowed. With hot, dry weather in both New Delhi and Cairo over the next three days and no acute crop stress signals, near-term price direction looks broadly sideways with a mild downside bias for average-quality lots. Global spice and seed trade flows remain robust, with Indian suppliers actively seeking new bulk export buyers for Nigella sativa, underlining comfortable supply in the short term. In Egypt, the wider agricultural sector is expanding export-oriented production, but Nigella remains a niche segment within a strong portfolio of herbs and specialty crops. Weather in both key producing hubs will be seasonally hot but not extreme enough in the next 72 hours to alter yield prospects, keeping the market focused on buyer interest, freight costs and currency moves rather than immediate supply shocks.

Prices & Differentials

All prices converted to EUR at ~1 EUR = 1.08 USD for comparability and rounded.

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Market Data Table
Schwarzer Pfeffer6.850 €/t+2,3 %
Koriander1.240 €/t−0,8 %
Kreuzkümmel2.100 €/t+1,5 %
Zimt (Cassia)8.900 €/t+0,4 %
Kurkuma3.200 €/t−1,2 %
Kardamom grün18.500 €/t+3,1 %
Ingwer (getr.)1.850 €/t+0,9 %
Chili (getr.)2.750 €/t−0,5 %
Schwarzer Pfeffer6.850 €/t+2,3 %
Koriander1.240 €/t−0,8 %
Kreuzkümmel2.100 €/t+1,5 %
Zimt (Cassia)8.900 €/t+0,4 %
Kurkuma3.200 €/t−1,2 %
Kardamom grün18.500 €/t+3,1 %
Ingwer (getr.)1.850 €/t+0,9 %
Chili (getr.)2.750 €/t−0,5 %
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Indian FCA prices for nearby truck- or container-loadings in New Delhi trade a bit below FOB levels, indicating still-comfortable local availability and logistics. The narrowing spread between Egyptian and Indian origins reflects slightly softer offers out of Cairo and steady competition from Indian exporters actively marketing 500+ mt lots of premium Nigella to global buyers. Retail-level offers for Egyptian-origin organic Nigella in Europe remain firm, confirming that most of the recent easing is at the bulk export level rather than downstream.

Supply, Demand & Trade Flows

On the supply side, academic and trade sources confirm India and Egypt among the key producers within an estimated global Nigella/black cumin complex of roughly several hundred thousand tons annually, leaving the market structurally well supplied under normal weather. Recent Indian commentary shows processors openly seeking new international outlets, signalling no immediate raw-seed tightness and supporting a mildly bearish tone for lower grades.

In Egypt, agriculture policy continues to prioritize higher-value crops and seed exports, with the government promoting certified seed production and export-oriented horticulture. While Nigella is a small piece of this portfolio, the general expansion in export infrastructure and phytosanitary capacity indirectly supports the reliability of Egyptian Nigella shipments. Demand-wise, Nigella benefits from its positioning as a functional food and herbal ingredient, but there are no fresh signals in the last few days of a sudden demand spike; inquiries appear steady, price-sensitive and quality-driven.

Weather Snapshot (EG & IN)

Egypt (Cairo region): The next three days (9–11 May) are forecast mostly sunny to hazy, with daytime highs rising from about 32°C to 36°C and warm nights, typical for the season. Winds may be breezy but there is no rain or heatwave anomaly indicated. For Nigella and similar herbs, such conditions are neutral to slightly supportive for late crop development and drying, provided irrigation is adequate.

India (New Delhi region): Hazy, hot weather dominates, with maximums climbing from roughly 37–38°C up to around 38–39°C over 9–11 May and very warm nights above 26–28°C. Air quality is expected to be very unhealthy, but in agronomic terms this pattern is close to seasonal norms ahead of the monsoon. No acute weather stress or harvest disruption is signalled for Nigella in the immediate three-day window, so weather is not a bullish catalyst right now.

Market Drivers & Risks

  • Comfortable Indian supply: Public outreach from Indian processors for bulk Nigella buyers underlines a supply-push environment, especially for cleaned but non-premium lots, capping upside in FOB India prices.
  • Strong but diversified Egyptian ag exports: Egypt’s broader USD 11.5 billion agricultural export base in 2025 suggests stable logistics and demand channels for niche seeds like Nigella, even if crop-specific data are limited.
  • Macro and freight: Currency volatility in both Egypt and India, plus container freight developments, remain key second-order drivers. No major freight shock has been reported in the last three days for this segment, so offers are mainly responding to buyer appetite and local currency moves rather than logistics crises.
  • Weather-neutral short term: With no immediate heatwave or rainfall shock over the next 72 hours in either Cairo or New Delhi, weather is a monitoring point rather than an active driver of price direction.

Trading Outlook (Next 1–2 Weeks)

  • Importers (EU/MENA): Consider scaling into Indian FOB purchases for Machine Clean and Kalonji Sortex while the Egypt–India premium is modest and supply-push offers persist. Prioritise suppliers with proven cleaning and EU-compliance documentation.
  • Blenders & packers in Egypt and the region: Use the current mild softening in Cairo FOB quotes to secure high-purity Sortex lots, but avoid over-committing far forward until clearer guidance emerges on 2026/27 sowing intentions.
  • Producers/Exporters in India: Given steady but price-sensitive demand, focus on differentiating via quality (uniform colour, low admixture, proper drying) rather than holding out for higher prices in the very near term.

3‑Day Regional Price Direction (EUR, indicative)

  • India – New Delhi FOB Nigella (Machine Clean, 99.8%): Around 1.80–1.85 EUR/kg; bias: sideways to slightly softer as export competition stays strong and weather is neutral.
  • India – New Delhi FOB Nigella (Kalonji Sortex, 99%): Around 1.75–1.80 EUR/kg; bias: sideways with limited volatility expected over the next three days.
  • Egypt – Cairo FOB Nigella Sortex (99.5%): Around 1.95–2.05 EUR/kg; bias: sideways with a mild downside risk if buyers continue to shift volume to competitively priced Indian origin.
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