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VEGOILS-Palm rises after 3 days of fall, logs first weekly drop in four

Malaysian palm oil futures increased on Friday after three straight sessions of losses, supported by recovery in competing vegetable oils and talks of possible modifications in Indonesia's export levy, yet it posted the initially weekly decline in four weeks.

The benchmark palm oil agreement for January shipment on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange got 118 ringgit, or 2.38%, to 5,081 ringgit ($ 1,137.20) a metric lot at closing.

The agreement fell 0.37% for the week.

This rumour about a possibility of Indonesia modifying levy or tax structure triggered some panic buying, a Kuala Lumpur-based trader said.

There was no official announcement on the levy changes and Indonesian authorities did not react to Reuters' ask for remarks about the rumour.

Profit taking ahead of the weekend and recovery in Chicago soyoil and Dalian palm olein added strength to the contract, another trader said.

Dalian's most-active soyoil contract fell 0.46%, while its palm oil agreement increased 2.06%. Soyoil costs on the Chicago Board of Trade were up 2.33%.

Palm oil tracks rate movements of competing edible oils, as it completes for a share in the worldwide veggie oils market.

Malaysian palm oil exports in Nov. 1-15 decreased between 6%. to 7.3% from a month ago, data from AmSpec Agri and freight. property surveyor Intertek Testing Services said on Friday, however improved. from Nov. 1-10 export information.

Indonesia's federal government

reaffirmed

to lawmakers today a strategy to carry out a 40% necessary. biodiesel mix with palm oil-based fuel, called B40, in January. 2025, as part of the brand-new federal government's fast wins programs.

The European Parliament sought on Thursday to water down a. restriction on the import of commodities such as beef and soy linked to. logging, and backed a 1 year delay to the new rule, in a. fresh push-back against the EU's ecological program.

(source: Reuters)