Latest News

Malaysian palm oil stock will drop as production slows, and exports increase

The industry regulator expects Malaysia's palm oils to decrease in the next few months. They will end the year with around 1.7m metric tons. This is due to a seasonal slowdown of production, which coincides in part with an increase in exports in order to meet the festive season demand.

Expected drops in palm oil inventories could help support benchmark futures. These have been under pressure lately due to cheaper soyoil supplies.

Ahmad Parveez Ghulam Kadir said that the Malaysian Palm Oil Board's (MPOB) director general, Ahmad Parveez Ghulam Kadir stated on Monday, "We expect exports to increase in the next months due to festive season demand."

Malaysian palm oil production usually drops off at the end of the year after a good September quarter. The MPOB reported that palm oil stocks in Malaysia increased by 4.18% month-on-month to 2.2 millions tons in August, which is the highest level since December 2023.

In recent weeks, palm oil prices were under pressure due to a steep drop in the price of soy oil. India, the world's largest palm oil consumer, increased its soy oil purchase for the next few months.

Kadir stated that despite this, the palm oil price is likely to remain stable in the months to come due to uncertainty over Indonesian supply.

He said that the proposed implementation of a B50 biodiesel program and government seizure of oil palm plantations could affect exports from Indonesia.

Indonesia currently mandates that biodiesel contain a minimum of 40% palm oil and plans to increase this to 50% as early as next year.

Agrinas Palma Nusantara, a state-owned firm, received 674,178 acres (1.7 million acres), or palm oil plantations, from Indonesia earlier this month. This brings the total land area given to Agrinas Palma Nusantara to 1.5 million hectares.

He said that oil palm replanting is slow in Malaysia. To speed it up, the MPOB has asked the government to increase the allocation from 100 million to 280 millions ringgit by 2026. (Reporting and editing by Subhranshu sahu; Rajendra Jadhav)

(source: Reuters)