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Palm oil gains three weeks on rival oils

The price of Malaysian palm oils futures ended a three-week rally Friday due to the weakness of rival edible oils. Traders also closed their positions before a long weekend.

At the close, the benchmark palm oil contract on Bursa Derivatives Exchange for November delivery fell 72 ringgit (1.62%) to 4,377 Ringgit ($1,040.90). The contract dropped 3.36% in the past week.

A Kuala Lumpur based trader reported that overnight weakness in rival oilseeds had spilled over into palm oil futures. Some market participants may have closed positions before the long weekend.

On Monday, the Malaysian Bourse and Chicago Board of Trade are closed for a holiday.

Dalian's palm oil contract, which is the most active contract, fell by 1.69%. Chicago Board of Trade soyoil prices were down by 1.05%.

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

The oil prices dropped, but they were on track for a gain of about 1% per week. This was due to the uncertainty surrounding Russian supply, and the expectation that demand would be lower as the driving season in America, the largest fuel consumer in the world, is coming to an end.

Palm oil is less appealing as a biodiesel feedstock due to the weaker crude oil futures.

The palm ringgit's trade currency has weakened by 0.19% to the dollar. This makes the commodity cheaper for foreign buyers. ($1 = 4.2050 ringgit)

(source: Reuters)