Latest News

Palm falls due to weakness in Chicago Soyoil

After five consecutive sessions of gains, the price of palm oil in Malaysia fell on Tuesday as Chicago soyoil prices dropped on news that U.S. import tariffs would be delayed for Mexico and Canada.

At midday, the benchmark palm oil contract on Bursa Malaysia's Derivatives exchange for April delivery fell 90 ringgit or 2.06% to 4,277 Ringgit ($960.04) per metric ton.

A Kuala Lumpur based trader stated that the crude palm oil futures fell due to weakness in the Chicago soybean oil market.

The trader stated that "the news that the U.S. would postpone the imposition of import tariffs against Mexico and Canada has caused a large sell-off this morning in Chicago soybean oil."

The Chicago Board of Trade reported a decline of 3.48% in soyoil. Dalian Commodity Exchange will be reopening on Wednesday after the Chinese Lunar New Year.

As palm oil competes to gain a share in the global vegetable oil market, it tracks the price fluctuations of competing edible oils.

The oil prices fell after U.S. president Donald Trump agreed not to impose steep tariffs for one month on Mexico and Canada - the two largest foreign oil suppliers in the United States.

Brent crude futures dropped 0.78%, to $75.38 per barrel at 0505 GMT. Palm oil is less appealing as a biodiesel feedstock due to the weaker crude oil futures.

The palm ringgit's trade currency strengthened by 0.29% against dollars, increasing the price of the commodity for buyers who hold foreign currencies.

Celeres, an agribusiness consulting firm, said Brazil's soybean crop in 2024/25 is expected to hit a record of 174 million metric tonnes, up from 170.8 million due to favorable weather conditions.

Technical analyst Wang Tao stated that palm oil could retrace to a range between 4,265 and 4,315 ringgits per ton as it has failed to break the resistance level of 4,402 ringgit.

(source: Reuters)