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Palm closes higher as Chicago soyoil and crude oil strengthen

Malaysian palm futures closed higher on Monday for the fifth session in a row, boosted by a stronger Chicago soyoil price and firmer crude prices.

The benchmark contract for palm oil delivery in April on the Bursa Derivatives exchange gained 84 Ringgit (1.96%) to close at $4,373 Ringgit ($978.30). In the last four sessions, it has gained 2.36%.

Anilkumar bagani, the commodity research director at Mumbai's Sunvin Group, said that crude palm oil futures were up on Friday, following gains in Chicago soyoil contracts.

Bagani said that the U.S. president Donald Trump's tariffs against Mexico, Canada, and China have pushed up soyoil in the U.S.

The recovery of CPO prices was also boosted by a strong recovery in the global energy price and short-covering on CPO futures.

Chicago Board of Trade Soyoil Prices Added 2.15% Dalian Commodity Exchange will be closed for Chinese Lunar New Year from January 28 to February 4th.

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

The oil prices increased after Trump imposed tariffs against Canada, Mexico, and China. This raised fears of a disruption in supply, but gains were limited by concerns over a possible economic-damaging trade war.

Palm oil is a better option as a biodiesel feedstock because crude oil futures are stronger.

Palm's currency, the ringgit (the palm-traded currency), fell 0.45% in value against the U.S. Dollar, making it cheaper for buyers with foreign currencies.

Malaysian palm oil exports fell between 12.3% to 20.1% in January, according to cargo surveyors.

A trade ministry official announced that Indonesia has lowered the crude palm oil benchmark price for February from $1,059.54 to $955.44 per metric ton. Export tax is $124 per ton in February, compared to $178 last month. ($1 = 4.4700 ringgit)

(source: Reuters)