Malaysian palm oil surges for fourth day on output concerns and firm rival oils

게시됨 2023년 3월 31일

Tridge 요약

Malaysian palm oil futures reached a more than one-week high and rose for the fourth consecutive session, driven by firm rival edible oils and anticipated lower production. The benchmark palm oil contract for June delivery on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange rose 2.27% to 3,791 ringgit ($857.69). This increase is due to the world's largest palm oil exporter, Indonesia, restricting exports and shifting global demand to Malaysia, which is estimated to have a decreased inventory below 2 million tonnes by the end of March. Cargo surveyors are scheduled to release March exports data on Friday, and millers expect a 22.9% slump in March 1-25 output.
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원본 콘텐츠

Malaysian palm oil futures closed at a more than one-week high on Thursday, rising for a fourth consecutive session, underpinned by firm rival edible oils and expectations of lower production. The benchmark palm oil contract FCPOc3 for June delivery on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange rose 84 ringgit, or 2.27%, to 3,791 ringgit ($857.69). “With both Dalian and Chicago soyoil trading firm today, Bursa Malaysia palm oil takes the opportunity to buy in anticipation of tomorrow export figures and to close the gap between futures and cash prices,” a Kuala Lumpur-based trader said, adding that supply concern following flood disruption also supporting Malaysian palm oil prices. Malaysian palm oil inventory estimated to shrank to below 2 million tonnes by the end of March, as world’s biggest palm oil exporter Indonesia raised domestic market obligation and restricted export, and global palm oil demand shifted to Malaysia, while production remained uncertain, said Anilkumar Bagani, ...

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