Malaysia’s palm oil stocks hit 8-month high as consumption slows

Published 2024년 10월 11일

Tridge summary

Malaysia's palm oil stocks increased by 6.93% in September, reaching an eight-month high of 2.01 million metric tons, as reported by the Malaysian Palm Oil Board. This increase is due to a significant decrease in local consumption, which offset the minor rise in exports and reduced production. The rise in stocks could potentially limit the gains in benchmark futures. The market is now looking at October palm oil production in Malaysia and the trend of competing oils to determine the price movement of palm oil.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Malaysia’s palm oil stocks rose more than expected in September to hit an eight-month high, as a sharp fall in local consumption outweighed a modest increase in exports and reduced production, the industry regulator said on Thursday. The rise in stocks in Malaysia, the world’s second-largest producer of palm oil after neighbouring Indonesia, could limit gains in benchmark futures, which are already hovering near their highest levels in six months. Malaysia’s palm oil stocks at the end of September rose 6.93 per cent from the previous month to 2.01 million metric tons, the highest since January, the Malaysian Palm Oil Board (MPOB) said. Crude palm oil production was down 3.80 per cent in September from August to 1.82 million tons, while palm oil exports ticked up 0.93 per cent to 1.54 million tons, it said. The market was surprised with the 37 per cent reduction in local consumption, which lifted stocks despite a drop in production, said Anilkumar Bagani, research head of ...

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