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VEGOILS-Palm oil reverses course amid production development unpredictability

Malaysian palm oil futures dropped on Thursday, removing earlier gains, amidst unpredictability over production development and some correction in competing veggie oils.

The benchmark palm oil contract for June delivery on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange shut down 0.54% at 4,249 ringgit ($ 901.55) per metric load, after increasing as much as 0.96% earlier in the day.

The contract deteriorated after the Southern Peninsular Palm Oil Millers Association (SPPOMA) reported greater output figures for March 1-20, a Kuala Lumpur-based trader stated, and as rival palm oil on the Dalian exchange quit most of its gains.

The SPPOMA information showed production for the duration was up 22.4%, the trader stated, while market waited for broader production information from the Malaysian Palm Oil Association for further guidance.

Dalian's palm oil contract rose 0.7% on Thursday, scaling back from intraday gains of 2.87% which had brought it to its greatest level considering that Dec. 2022.

On the other hand, Dalian's soyoil contract increased 1.36% and soyoil rates on the Chicago Board of Trade were hardly changed.

Palm oil is affected by price motions in associated oils as they contend for a share of the international vegetable oils market.

On the physical side, in fact palm demand is not that terrific. The supply exists, and some locations rival oils are relatively more affordable than palm. To have continuation of advantage for CPO (crude palm oil) futures, rival oilseeds need to go higher, another trader stated.

Exports of Malaysian palm oil products for March 1-20 were seen up between 7.4% and 16.3% from the very same duration last month, freight surveyors Intertek Screening Services and Amspec Agri said.

Palm oil might rise into a range of 4,751-4,859 ringgit per metric ton in the second quarter, technical analyst Wang Tao said.

(source: Reuters)