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VEGOILS - Palm ends lower due to profit taking; Indonesian Group pushes for B50 delay

Malaysian palm futures ended lower on Thursday after four sessions of gains. Investors booked profits while an Indonesian industry group reportedly lobbied the government to postpone the B50 biofuel mandate.

The benchmark contract for palm oil delivery in October on the Bursa Derivatives exchange lost 30 ringgit or 0.68% to 4,405 Ringgit ($1,046.32) per metric ton.

A local news website quoted Eddy Martono, the chairman of the palm oil industry GAPKI as saying that the plan could lead to a decrease in palm oil exports.

GAPKI was told that it did not submit a written request, but a government official denied having received such a proposal.

Anilkumar bagani, the head of research for Mumbai-based Sunvin Group's vegetable oil broker Sunvin Group, said that futures were trading lower on the back of profit taking amid talks of a (GAPKI), which requested officials to delay (B50) as the industry was not ready.

Dalian's palm oil contract, which is the most active contract, fell by 1.09%. Chicago Board of Trade soyoil prices were also down by 0.9%.

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

A leading trade group reported that India's palm-oil imports fell in July due to cancellations of import contracts. Meanwhile, soyoil exports soared by a third year, boosted by the arrival of June consignments and competitive prices.

A circular posted on the Malaysian Palm Oil Board's website on Wednesday showed that Malaysia increased its crude palm oil price reference for September, which increases the export duty to 10%.

The palm's trade currency, the ringgit, fell 0.12% in value against the dollar. This made the commodity more affordable for foreign-currency buyers. $1 = 4.2100 Ringgit (Reporting and editing by Harikrishnan Nair, Vijay Kishore).

(source: Reuters)