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Palm oil prices rise on the back of strong Chicago soyoil and low production

Palm oil prices rise on the back of strong Chicago soyoil and low production

The price of Malaysian palm oils futures rose on Tuesday. This was due to a weak outlook for production in February, and the strength of Chicago soyoil. However, weak Dalian oils, and muted exports, limited gains.

By midday, the benchmark contract for palm oil delivery in May on the Bursa Derivatives Market gained 2 ringgit or 0.04% to 4,561 Ringgit per metric ton.

A Kuala Lumpur based trader stated that "lower production provides support".

Dalian's palm oil contract, which is the most active contract in Dalian, lost 0.97%. Chicago Board of Trade soyoil prices rose by 0.8%.

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

A senior regulatory official said that Malaysia's palm oils stocks will fall to 1.5 million tons by the end February due to floods which have affected production, and Ramadan, the festival of fasting, has boosted demand.

A leading palm oil producer said on Tuesday that the supply of palm oil is likely to be tight for two to three more months due to the floods in Indonesia and Malaysia. These two countries are the top two producers of palm oil worldwide.

According to cargo surveyor, the exports of Malaysian products containing palm oil in the period February 1-25 are expected to decline by 2.7%.

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AmSpec Agri Malaysia estimates that exports have increased by 1.2% compared to a month earlier.

As a double-top or flat pattern may be forming, palm oil could fall towards the low of 4,457 Ringgit per metric tonne on February 17.

(source: Reuters)