Aniseed Prices Hold Steady as India Softens Marginally vs Firm Egypt FOB
Concise May 2026 aniseed price update: Indian FOB slightly softer, Egyptian FOB firm, balanced supply, stable demand, and limited short-term upside.
Prices & Recent Moves
FOB indications converted to EUR (approximate FX: 1 USD ≈ 0.92 EUR where needed):
Spice‑complex benchmarks such as Indian cumin remain under mild pressure due to large carry‑in stocks and weak export demand, signalling limited spill‑over upside for anise in the near term. Egyptian herb/spice FOB offers indicate overall stable to slightly firm pricing amid persistent freight and logistics premia, helping keep Egyptian anise floors intact.
Supply & Demand Drivers
India (IN): Recent spice‑market reports highlight comfortable supplies and notable stock overhangs in seed spices like cumin, with exports lagging and prices capped despite lower production. This broader seed‑spice softness spills into sentiment for aniseed: buyers are well covered, and there is little urgency to extend coverage aggressively at current levels.
Egypt (EG): Egypt remains a key exporter of anise and related seeds, with customs data showing sustained shipments of anise/fennel/coriander/cumin blends through early 2026, underpinning baseline demand from regional buyers. Export‑oriented processors report stable to good inquiry for dried herbs and seeds, and updated price lists for Egyptian herbs/spices suggest a broadly steady market, with FOB Egypt offers reflecting firm interest from Europe and the Gulf.
Weather & Crop Conditions
Egypt (Nile Delta / EG): A 7‑day forecast for locations in the Nile Delta (e.g. Zagazig) points to hot, predominantly dry conditions with daytime temperatures mostly in the 30s °C, isolated breezy periods, and only negligible rain risk. These conditions are typical for late May and broadly favourable for drying and storage of anise and other seeds. No immediate weather‑driven supply threat is visible for the next week.
India (key anise areas / IN): No recent alerts point to acute weather stress in major spice belts of western and northern India over the coming days. National discussions around seed‑spice markets instead focus on ample stocks and normal seasonal patterns, rather than weather‑driven tightness. With monsoon onset still in the early stages, near‑term anise availability is shaped more by existing inventories and export demand than by fresh‑crop concerns.
Market Fundamentals & External Factors
- Stock levels: High carry‑in stocks in related seed spices (especially cumin) in India keep overall seed‑spice supply comfortable, limiting upside for anise despite pockets of origin‑specific tightness.
- Export demand: Trade data and exporter commentary indicate that while Egyptian anise and herb exports remain structurally strong, current buying is measured rather than aggressive. In India, subdued export demand is a key reason why seed‑spice prices, including for anise, are not rallying.
- Logistics & freight: Recent exporter discussions highlight that Red Sea and regional shipping routes remain more expensive than pre‑crisis norms, with some lanes via the Cape of Good Hope still bearing higher base freight rates. This raises landed costs for buyers but has not yet translated into significant FOB price spikes for anise; instead, it supports a gently firmer floor for Egyptian origin relative to India.
Short-Term Outlook & Trading Guidance
Bias for the next 1–2 weeks: sideways to mildly soft for Indian anise, sideways to slightly firm for Egyptian origin.
- Importers (EU / MENA): Consider covering a portion of Q3 needs in Indian origin at current slightly softer levels, while maintaining flexibility for incremental buying if seed‑spice weakness persists. For Egypt, treat current FOB levels as a reasonable floor, with limited room for discounts given logistics and stable demand.
- Blenders & industrial users: Where specifications allow, a mixed‑origin strategy (India + Egypt) can average costs and hedge against freight or origin‑specific disruptions. Prioritise securing reliable shipping windows from Egypt to avoid freight‑driven spikes in landed prices.
- Origin sellers: Indian exporters may need to stay competitive on price and payment terms to stimulate fresh demand, while Egyptian shippers can focus on service reliability and quality differentiation rather than aggressive discounting.