Stable but Capped: Chad Sesame Prices Hold as Indian Offers Ease
Concise sesame market update: Chad-origin prices stable in EUR, logistics calm, Indian mandi values easing and 3-day FCA Europe outlook flat.
Prices & Differentials
Latest quoted levels for hulled white sesame (99.95% purity, non-organic, origin Chad, FCA Germany) are around EUR 1.52–1.55/kg, essentially flat over the past week after a small uptick earlier in May. Indian hulled sesame FOB offers, adjusted to EUR at prevailing FX, are currently in the EUR 1.30–1.35/kg band for standard grades, putting a modest cap on Chad’s ability to widen its premium.
Recent Indian mandi data from Gujarat show white sesame modal prices near INR 8,900/quintal (about EUR 0.96–1.00/kg farm-gate equivalent), down from higher levels seen earlier in the season, signalling some easing of local tightness. Nigerian FOB offers for bulk sesame, though quoted in aggregated bag values, also translate into a competitive range versus Chad and Sudan, reinforcing a broadly stable to slightly softer global price structure.
*Indicative conversion from recent USD/bag quotation.
Supply, Demand & Trade Flows
Chad has consolidated its role as a reliable sesame supplier to Europe, the Middle East and Asia, with several modern processors and exporters in N’Djamena and across the production belt focusing on white and mixed sesame. The country’s export orientation and relatively lean domestic consumption leave a consistent surplus, which helps smooth price swings even when neighbouring origins are disrupted.
On the demand side, edible oil and bakery sectors in Europe and the Middle East remain steady, while some buyers are still diversifying away from Sudan because of conflict-related risks. Recent analysis of Sudan’s economy and exports highlights sesame as one of the key cash crops affected by logistical and political uncertainty, encouraging incremental demand shifts toward alternative African origins, including Chad and Nigeria. This substitution supports a pricing floor for Chad, even as Indian and Nigerian offers remain competitive.
Fundamentals & Logistics
Regionally, the Red Sea and Port Sudan corridor remain a focal point for risk assessments. However, port congestion indicators for Port Sudan for the week of 10–16 May show a low congestion index and median vessel waiting times of just 0.06 days, sharply lower than the prior week. This suggests that, for now, maritime logistics through the Red Sea for sesame exports from East and Central Africa are functioning relatively smoothly, keeping freight surcharges contained.
Security analysis still points to an elevated risk of drone activity and conflict around eastern Sudan and key corridors, which could flare up and intermittently disrupt flows, but no new incidents in the past few days have materially changed shipping conditions for oilseeds. Central African exporters also continue to diversify routes via Douala and other regional ports, further reducing single-corridor vulnerability. Overall, fundamental availability from Africa and India looks adequate, aligning with the slight softening in Indian mandi prices.
Weather & Crop Conditions (Chad Focus)
Chad is transitioning from the hot dry season into the early rains, with the main agricultural campaign typically intensifying between May and October. Recent regional climate commentary points to above-average warmth in 2026, but without clear evidence yet of acute rainfall deficits in Chad’s sesame-growing zones over the last few days.
At this stage of the season, the weather risk for sesame is more about the onset and distribution of rains in the coming weeks than about current stress. With no strong anomaly signal emerging in the latest public updates, weather is not a major bullish driver for near-term prices, though buyers should monitor June rainfall closely for any sign of delayed sowing or early-season replanting needs.
3-Day Price Outlook & Trading Strategy
Directional outlook (next 3 days, Chad → EU): Sideways to marginally softer in EUR terms, assuming stable freight and FX.
- Exporters in Chad: Consider locking in current FCA/FOR values for near-term shipments, as Indian and Nigerian competition on FOB basis limits upside. Use any small EUR strength versus INR or USD to improve margins rather than chasing higher nominal prices.
- European buyers: Short-covering and spot needs can be comfortably met at present levels; stagger purchases over the coming week rather than front-loading, as fundamentals and port data do not currently justify a near-term spike.
- Traders & aggregators: Maintain balanced books; basis trades between Chad FCA and India FOB look slightly in favour of buyers. Watch for any sudden change in Red Sea security or an abrupt rally in competing edible oils, which could quickly tighten sesame spreads.