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Palmetto prices rise after three sessions of bargain-buying losses

Palmetto prices rise after three sessions of bargain-buying losses

After three sessions of losses in a row, Malaysian palm oils futures rose on Wednesday. This was due to bargain-hunting after the contract reached a two-month low.

By midday, the benchmark palm oil contract on Bursa Malaysia's Derivatives exchange rose by 0.75% to $4277 per metric ton ($966.34).

This week, the contract has fallen by 2.97%.

When prices reached the lowest point of the day, they were too cheap to ignore. "We saw a great deal of bargain-hunting today. A lot of buyers came out and there was a (short)covering as well," said Paramalingam Supramaniam of Selangor brokerage Pelindung Bestari.

Intertek Testing Services, a cargo surveyor, said that exports of palm oil products from Malaysia for the period March 1-25 fell 8.1%, to 835.732 tonnes, month-on-month. AmSpec Agri Malaysia, an independent inspection company, estimated that exports had fallen 8.5% during the same period.

Palm oil contracts on the Dalian Commodity Exchange fell by 0.87%, while soyoil contracts lost 0.38%. Soyoil fell 0.12% on the Chicago Board of Trade.

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

(source: Reuters)