VEGOILS-Palm oil loses more ground, USDA report eyed
Posted by Labels: China, Futures, industri sawit, Malaysia, palm oil, Palm Oil Business, palm oil futures, Singapore* Drought woes in South America and firm demand limit losses
* Price correction after palm oil hits one-year high on
Tuesday
* USDA quarterly inventory report and planting forecast due
Friday
(Updates prices)
By Chew Yee Kiat
SINGAPORE, March 29 (Reuters) - Malaysian palm oil futures
slipped for a second day on Thursday, as traders booked more
profit from a rally this week, although losses were curbed by
soybean supply fears in South America and firm export outlook
for palm oil.
Palm oil could not breach the psychological 3,500 ringgit
level this week, especially when market players were cautious
ahead of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's quarterly
inventory report and planting forecast due on Friday.
"We see that palm oil prices have come to a one-year high,
so it's not surprising that some profit-taking activities start
to kick in, especially now as we are at the end of the month,
some book squaring is going to happen," said Ker Chung Yang, an
analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore.
"There could be some positioning ahead of this coming
Friday's reports. Although the market is speculating that there
could be more planted acres for corn, the reports could turn out
to be a surprise and soybean prices could subsequently be
weighed on that."
Benchmark June palm oil futures on the Bursa
Malaysia Derivatives Exchange closed down 0.5 percent at 3,456
ringgit ($1,127) per tonne. This week the market went as high as
3,497 ringgit, a level unseen since March 10 2011.
Traded volumes were thin at 20,280 lots of 25 tonnes each,
compared to the usual 25,000 lots.
Palm oil investors are watching closely on the acreage
battle between corn and soybean because a smaller planted area
for soybean could boost demand for palm oil, which competes with
crushed soybean oil in the vegetable oil market.
Malaysian export data for the first 25 days of March pointed
to an improvement in buying interest for the tropical oil
compared to a month ago, and traders are expecting exports for
the full month to end higher.
Market players are also focusing on Malaysia's palm oil
supply, which could be lower in March on the back of seasonality
and the effect of biological stress.
A lower palm oil production may push up prices further as
global oilseed supply is tight especially as a drought in South
America has disrupted soybean production.
Oil prices held near $124 a barrel on Thursday on concerns
about the loss of Iranian oil despite the prospect of a release
of strategic oil reserves in the West and renewed promises of
additional supply from Saudi Arabia.
In other vegetable oil markets, the most active U.S. soyoil
contract for May lost 0.1 percent in Asian trade while
the most active September 2012 soyoil contract on
China's Dalian Commodity exchange was trading down 0.8 percent.
Palm, soy and crude oil prices at 1004 GMT
Contract Month Last Change Low High Volume
MY PALM OIL APR2 3483 -17.00 3465 3500 214
MY PALM OIL MAY2 3465 -17.00 3451 3483 1971
MY PALM OIL JUN2 3456 -17.00 3445 3477 11141
CHINA PALM OLEIN SEP2 8664 -66.00 8620 8734 241496
CHINA SOYOIL SEP2 9642 -74.00 9606 9722 589938
CBOT SOY OIL MAY2 54.57 -0.03 54.44 54.83 8184
NYMEX CRUDE MAY2 104.92 -0.49 104.89 105.70 16785
Palm oil prices in Malaysian ringgit per tonne
CBOT soy oil in U.S. cents per pound
Dalian soy oil and RBD palm olein in Chinese yuan per tonne
Crude in U.S. dollars per barrel
($1=3.066 ringgit)
(Editing by Niluksi Koswanage)
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