FCPO Related News (Mon, Apr 1)
[Malaysia March Palm Oil Exports 1.36 Mln Tons, up 2.9% on month - Intertek]
SINGAPORE,
March 29 (Reuters) - Malaysian palm oil futures slipped to the lowest in two
weeks on Friday to record a fourth straight quarterly drop, after data showed
higher-than-expected U.S. soybean stockpiles. The U.S. Department of
Agriculture pegged soybean stocks at 999 million bushels, above trade guesses
of 935 million. Higher soybean stocks for crushing into soybean oil may shift
some demand away from competing palm oil.
Palm
oil prices also came under pressure ahead of export data next week that traders
will scour for clues on whether demand is strong enough to whittle down high
stockpiles in Malaysia, the second-largest producer. "Overall, the news of
significantly higher-than-expected U.S. soybean stockpiles but slightly lower
than expected soybean planting acreage is negative to crude palm oil (CPO)
prices due to its strong correlation with soybean oil prices," Alan Lim Seong
Chun, research analyst with Malaysia's Kenanga Investment Bank, said in a note
to clients on Friday. "Nevertheless, we think that CPO prices' downside is
limited as we expect a CPO seasonal demand recovery in the near term due to
warmer weather in the northern hemisphere."
In
other vegetable oil markets, the most-active September soybean oil contract on
the Dalian Commodities Exchange fell 1.7 percent in late Asian trade. The Brent
crude futures markets and the U.S. soybean markets were shut for the Good
Friday holiday. [Reuters]
Today’s
Support and Resistance for benchmark June contract is located around 2,340 and
2,400 respectively.
No comments:
Post a Comment