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US Report: Palm oil jumps on rival oil that is stronger

Malaysian palm futures rose by more than 2% in the past 24 hours, following gains made by rival edible oils. A positive U.S. report about world agricultural demand and supply estimates also helped.

By midday, the benchmark contract for palm oil delivery in April on the Bursa Derivatives exchange had risen 102 ringgit or 2.22% to 4,695 Ringgit ($1,051.28) per metric ton. The Malaysian market was closed for a holiday on Tuesday.

A Kuala Lumpur based trader reported that the Crude Palm Oil Futures were lifted due to a stronger oilseeds rival market and a positive World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates Report (WASDE), oilseeds from the U.S Department of Agriculture.

Dalian's palm oil contract, which is the most active contract in Dalian, increased by 1.19%. Chicago Board of Trade soyoil prices were up by 0.67%.

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

By February 9, 2024/25 soybean imports from the European Union, which began in the summer, had reached 8.36 million tons, a 10% rise compared to the previous season.

According to the European Commission, imports of palm oil reached 1,73 million metric tons in the first quarter, which is a decline of 21% from the same time last year.

In its February outlook, China's Agriculture Ministry kept its forecasts largely unchanged for corn, soya beans and other crops in the crop year 2024/25. However, there was a small revision in soybean planted acres from 10,321 million to 10,325 million.

The oil price fell after an industry report revealed an increase in U.S. stockpiles of crude and as tariff fears weighed on sentiment.

The palm ringgit's currency traded unchanged in relation to the U.S. dollar.

Technical analyst Wang Tao suggested that the price of palm oil could retrace to between 4,494 and 4,523 ringgit a ton based on its wave pattern.

(source: Reuters)