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Palm oil prices rise on the back of bargain-buying, while soyoil is spread.

Palm oil prices rise on the back of bargain-buying, while soyoil is spread.
Palm oil prices rise on the back of bargain-buying, while soyoil is spread.

Malaysian palm futures rose on Thursday for the?second session in a row, boosted by bargain-buying and an improved price competition against soyoil.

By midday, the benchmark palm oil contract on Bursa Derivatives Exchange for March delivery had gained 30 ringgit or 0.76% to $3,996 ringgit (US$978.21) per metric ton.

Paramalingam Supramaniam is the director of Selangor brokerage Pelindung Bestari. He said that traders are buying the price drops following the recent sell-off. The price of palm oil also has become "increasingly appealing" compared to the prices for other oils, especially soybean oil.

Dalian's palm oil contract gained 1.27%, but its most active soyoil contract dropped 0.31%. Prices of soyoil on the Chicago Board of Trade rose?0.45%.

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

Market participants assessed the risks of a blockade on Venezuelan oil tankers, which could threaten the supply.

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

The palm ringgit's trade currency, the dollar, edged up 0.05%, making it slightly more expensive for buyers with foreign currencies.

A circular posted on the Malaysian Palm Oil Board's website revealed that Malaysia had lowered the crude palm oil price reference for January 2026 to a level which would lower the export duty from 13% to 9.5%.

(source: Reuters)