FCPO
Related News (Fri, Mar 29)
KUALA
LUMPUR, March 28 (Reuters) - Malaysian palm oil futures fell to a
more-than-one-week low on Thursday, with investors avoiding risky moves as they
await key industry export data due next week. Fears over Cyprus's bailout deal
damaging the euro zone's fragile recovery roiled global financial and commodity
markets, including palm, most of this week and kept investors on edge.
Palm's
dismal export performance in the first 25 days of the month also upset market
players and weighed on prices, which have lost more than three percent this
week. Exports fell 7.5 percent over the period from March 1 to 25, from a month
ago, due to a slowdown in shipments of crude palm oil. Traders are now waiting
for cargo surveyor data on exports for the full month, due next Monday, and
industry regulator data on output and inventory, due in mid-April, to gauge
palm's direction in the coming months. "The market is consolidating and is
still unsure -- there's no new factor currently moving this market," said
a trader with a foreign commodities brokerage in Malaysia. "Everything
depends on the production in March. If production this month is lower, then you
will see stocks breaking below 2 million tonnes, for sure," he added.
The
benchmark June contract on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange lost 1.5
percent to 2,411 ringgit ($779) per tonne by the close, which is also its
intraday low, a level unseen since March 19. Total traded volume stood at
43,185 lots of 25 tonnes each, higher than the average 35,000 tonnes seen so
far this year. Technicals for the next quarter were bearish for Malaysian palm
oil. Prices are expected to fall to 1,953 ringgit, indicated by its wave
pattern and a Fibonacci ratio analysis, said Reuters market analyst Wang Tao.
Stockpiles
in February in Malaysia, the world's No.2 producer, inched down 5 percent from
January to stand at 2.44 million tonnes now. Stocks had hit a record high of
2.63 million tonnes in December as strong production and tepid global demand caused
prices to tumble more than 20 percent in 2012.
Traders say
total exports of palm oil products in March need to rise above 1.5 million
tonnes for prices to recover, but also stressed that output of the vegetable
oil would play a big role. "It's very critical this month. If the base
production is low this month, then for the next few months you'll still have a low
base," the Malaysia-based trader said.
In other
markets, Brent futures held above $109 a barrel on Thursday on hopes of a
revival in demand growth in the world's biggest consumer, the United States,
following a surprise fall in product inventories, while worries over Europe's
debt problems capped gains. In vegetable
oil markets, U.S. soyoil for May delivery lost 0.4 percent in late Asian trade.
The most-active September soybean oil contract on the Dalian Commodities Exchange
closed 0.8 percent lower.
Today’s
Support and Resistance for benchmark June contract is located around 2,366 and
2,425 respectively.
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