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Thai–Vietnamese Dried Papaya Edges Higher as Vietnam FOB Softens

Thai–Vietnamese Dried Papaya Edges Higher as Vietnam FOB Softens

CMB
CMB News Editorial
Editorial Desk

Concise dried papaya market update: Thai FCA prices edge higher, Vietnam FOB eases slightly. Weather in Thailand & Vietnam, logistics and 3-day price outlook.

Thai dried papaya prices are ticking up slightly in Europe, while Vietnamese FOB levels have eased marginally, keeping the TH–VN spread narrow and favoring short‑term spot coverage rather than aggressive forward buying. European buyers see a mildly firmer market for Thai-origin sugared dried papaya, with recent offers in the Netherlands up just over 0.5% week on week in EUR terms. Vietnamese cubes ex‑Hanoi have slipped slightly, reflecting competitive export behavior amid generally strong but diversified agro‑export flows. Weather in Bangkok and Hanoi is seasonally hot and stormy over the next three days, supportive for papaya growth but with some localized harvest and processing disruption risk. Logistics from Thailand remain constrained by high fuel and domestic freight costs, while Asia–Europe ocean freight is still inflated by Red Sea diversions, keeping landed prices elevated despite modest raw‑material pressure.

Prices & Spreads

Thai dried papaya (normal sugar, 5–10 mm, FCA Dordrecht) is roughly stable to slightly firmer versus early May, with current levels around EUR 3.50–3.62/kg after a minor uptick from the previous assessments. Vietnamese dried papaya cubes (10–30 mm, FOB Hanoi) have eased from earlier offers near EUR 5.00/kg to just under that level, indicating modest price-softening pressure at origin.

The net effect is a modestly wider but still historically tight spread between Thai FCA and Vietnamese FOB, leaving Thailand competitively placed for nearby European demand once freight is added, while Vietnam remains more of a specialty/quality play rather than a pure price leader.

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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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Supply, Demand & Logistics

In Thailand, broader fruit exports are facing headwinds from rising logistics and fuel costs, with local road freight volumes reportedly down 15–20% year on year, which keeps domestic transport rates firm and adds a cost floor for exporters shipping to ports and regional hubs. At the same time, export-quality control on high-profile fruits such as durian has been tightened, signaling closer scrutiny of orchard and packing practices that can spill over into other processed-fruit lines, including dried papaya.

Vietnam’s overall agro-forestry-fishery exports rose by about 5.4% in value in the first four months of 2026, underlining strong demand for a broad basket of agricultural goods, where dried fruit is a small but growing niche. This stronger baseline demand, combined with increasingly professionalized export operations, helps explain why Vietnamese dried papaya prices have only softened marginally despite competition from Thailand.

On the freight side, Asia–Europe container rates remain elevated and lead times extended due to ongoing Red Sea rerouting, which continues to pressure CIF/CFR price ideas for dried fruit shipments into Europe. However, relatively short-haul routes within Asia and to nearby markets are less affected, allowing Thai and Vietnamese exporters to prioritize regional sales when European buyers resist higher landed prices.

Weather Outlook: TH & VN

Bangkok and central Thailand face very warm conditions with considerable cloudiness and scattered thunderstorms from May 9–11, with daytime highs around 35–36°C. These conditions are broadly favorable for papaya growth but can intermittently slow harvesting and solar-assisted drying, potentially creating minor bottlenecks if storms are intense.

Hanoi and northern Vietnam will see mostly cloudy weather with intermittent showers and a couple of thunderstorms over the same three-day period, with highs in the upper 20s to around 30°C. This pattern supports steady fruit development but may limit sun-drying windows and require processors to rely more heavily on mechanical drying, keeping processing costs from falling further.

Market Drivers & Sentiment

Investor and buyer interest in tropical dried fruit remains stable, with broader dried-fruit categories such as mango showing price stability and only marginal week-on-week moves, indicating no acute demand shock. Thai participation in upcoming regional food trade fairs later in May is also likely to underpin export marketing efforts for value-added fruit products, including dried papaya, helping sustain order books into late Q2.

Overall sentiment in both Thailand and Vietnam is cautiously constructive: exporters are managing higher logistics and compliance costs, but they benefit from resilient end-demand and a diversified product mix. In this environment, dried papaya is more likely to track the broader dried-fruit complex than to decouple sharply in either direction.

Trading Outlook (Next 2–4 Weeks)

  • Buyers (EU importers): Use the current narrow TH–VN spread to secure near-term coverage on Thai FCA positions while freight remains the main cost risk; avoid overextending beyond 1–2 months unless freight conditions improve.
  • Buyers (Asia/Middle East): Consider testing Vietnam offers for premium or differentiated specs, as slight FOB easing suggests room for negotiation on volume deals.
  • Origin processors: In Thailand and Vietnam, lock in key input and energy costs where possible; with weather seasonally stormy, be prepared for short-lived disruptions rather than structural supply shocks.

3‑Day Regional Price Indication (Directional)

  • Thailand → Europe (FCA NL, Thai origin): Prices likely to remain stable to slightly firmer over the next three days, supported by local logistics costs and steady demand.
  • Vietnam (FOB Hanoi): Dried papaya cubes expected to trade steady with a mild downward bias as exporters stay competitive but resist deep discounts.
  • Regional Asian markets (TH & VN origins): Landed prices projected to stay broadly stable, with weather-related disruptions too localized and short-term to drive significant moves.
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