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VEGOILS-Palm trades sideways ahead of holidays; down weekly

Malaysian palm oil futures traded sideways on Friday, ahead of a long weekend, as investors mulled over lower competing oil costs and a weaker ringgit.

The benchmark palm oil agreement for August delivery on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange closed up 10 ringgit, or 0.25%, to 3,946 ringgit ($ 836.55) a metric heap.

The agreement, however, dipped 0.73% this week to mark its 2nd week-on-week decline.

Palm oil was seen trading sideways ahead of a long weekend as the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange will be closed on Monday for the Hari Raya Haji holiday, stated Anilkumar Bagani, research study head of Mumbai-based veggie oils broker Sunvin Group.

In view of slowing production in Malaysia and rising exports in June, palm rates are anticipated to get support around 3900 ringgit per lot, however the recovery might get topped around 4150 ringgit per lot, Bagani said.

Dalian's most-active soyoil contract fell 0.55%,. while its palm oil contract lost 0.54%. Soyoil costs. on the Chicago Board of Trade edged down 0.8%.

The U.S. soy processing rate increased in May from a. seven-month low a month previously, as some crush plants resumed. operations after seasonal downtime for repair and maintenance. and as margins improved, experts stated ahead of a National. Oilseed Processors Association month-to-month report on Monday.

Palm oil is affected by rate movements in related oils as. they contend for a share in the international veggie oils market.

Oil costs eased on Friday as markets examined the effect. of U.S. interest rates remaining greater for longer than. anticipated.

Weaker petroleum futures make palm a less appealing option. for biodiesel feedstock.

The Malaysian ringgit, palm's currency of trade,. weakened 0.26% versus the dollar. A weaker ringgit makes palm. oil more attractive for foreign currency holders.

(source: Reuters)