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Palmettos rises but drops monthly

Palmettos rises but drops monthly
Palmettos rises but drops monthly

Malaysian palm oils futures rose on Friday on the strength of Dalian edible oils, but they posted their largest monthly decline in ten months due to sluggish?exports and a stronger currency.

After a 1% decline on Thursday, the benchmark?palm-oil contract for May delivery at Bursa Derivatives Exchange gained 35 ringgit or 0.87% to 4,040 Ringgit ($1,039.09).

The contract dropped 4.47% in the month of February, which is its biggest monthly drop since April 2025.

Anilkumar?Bagani, head of commodity research at Mumbai-based Sunvin?Group, said that "Bursa Malaysia crude Palm Oil futures opened gap higher following a rally in Chicago Soy Oil futures overnight."

Dalian's soyoil contract, which is the most active in the market, was unchanged after having gained as much as 0.17 % earlier in session. Palm?oil had also gained 0.11%. Prices of soyoil on the Chicago Board of Trade were up 0.03% following a 1.8% increase overnight.

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

According to AmSpec Agri Malaysia, an independent inspection company, exports of palm oil products from Malaysia for the period February 1 to 25, fell by 16.1% compared to a month ago. Intertek Testing Services put the decline at 12,1%.

The Malaysian Ringgit, contract currency for trade, eased 0.15% versus the U.S. Dollar, but remained at its highest level since April 2018. The ringgit strengthened by 1.3% in February, the seventh consecutive month.

A stronger ringgit makes ?palm oil more expensive for foreign currency holders.

First Resources, a palm oil company in Indonesia, said that it paid the Indonesian government $5.6 million "in relation to the land areas"?that were handed over?to the government.

Technical analyst Wang Tao stated that palm oil could?break through a resistance level of 4,058 Ringgit per ton and bounce in a range between 4,076-4095 Ringgit. ($1 = 3.8880 ringgit)

(source: Reuters)