Latest News

VEGOILS-Palm ticks up tracking soyoil, weaker crude caps gains

Malaysian palm oil futures firmed on Monday, tracking Chicago soyoil higher, however stayed rangebound as continued weakness in crude and other completing edible oils weighed.

The benchmark palm oil agreement for September shipment on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange was up 12 ringgit, or 0.31%, at 3,912 ringgit ($ 830.57) a load by the midday break, after falling 1.49% on Friday.

The agreement was down 1.17% last week.

Palm opened gap lower on a technical break however is seen recovering from the crucial support levels following some strength in Chicago soy oil futures, said Anilkumar Bagani, research head at Mumbai-based vegetable oils broker Sunvin Group.

Exports of Malaysian palm oil products for June 1-20 fell between 8.1% and 12.9% from a month earlier, independent evaluation business AmSpec Agri Malaysia and Intertek Testing Providers stated recently.

Traders are awaiting quotes for exports for June 1-25, due on Tuesday.

Petroleum prices inched down on Monday as concerns of higher-for-longer rate of interest resurfaced and lifted the dollar, offsetting assistance for oil markets from geopolitical tensions and OPEC+ supply cuts.

Weaker petroleum futures make palm a less attractive choice for biodiesel feedstock.

Dalian's most-active soyoil agreement was the same, while its palm oil agreement fell 0.44%. Soyoil prices on the Chicago Board of Trade were up 0.32%.

Palm oil is affected by rate motions in related oils as they complete for a share in the global vegetable oils market.

Projection dryness in the Black Sea area's breadbasket is likely to stunt sunflower and corn yields, while heavy rain in the United States after near-record temperatures threaten to take a toll on crops, hitting world supplies and pressing costs higher.

Palm oil is anticipated to break assistance at 3,889 ringgit per metric tonne, and fall into the 3,811-3,843 ringgit variety, technical analyst Wang Tao said. ($1 = 4.7100 ringgit)

(source: Reuters)