Palm and Lauric Oils Conference & Exhibition 2013
Palm
oil prices could drop further this year due to swelling supplies of competing commodities
such as oilseeds, while high stocks in the world's top consumers and producers
of the tropical oil will also drag. Prices of palm oil plummeted 23 percent
last year largely on a stockbuild in major producers Indonesia
and Malaysia, and traders and analysts at a conference in Kuala Lumpur said
they could fall further when global oilseed supply kicks into high gear later
this year. "In 2013 post-September, we see big supplies of soybeans,
sunflower seeds and even of palm oil, which will be entering a new high cycle.
We have also begun the oil year with the heaviest carry-over stocks in
history," leading industry analyst Dorab Mistry said on Wednesday at the
meeting.
Indonesia,
the world's top palm oil producer, does not publish official data on inventory
levels, but they were estimated at 5 million tonnes in January, while No. 2
producer Malaysia started 2013 with record stocks of 2.63 million tonnes. "Therefore
the outlook further forward, given normal weather, is bearish," continued
Mistry, who is also the director of Indian conglomerate Godrej International
Ltd. Conference attendees were also focusing on inventory in top buyers India
and China, which rose to record levels in
February as traders stocked up ahead of changes in policy by their respective
governments. Mistry said prices should remain in a 2,300-2,500 ringgit ($740-806)
range until end-April, warning that trading may be more volatile due to a
looming election in Malaysia. Prices stood at around 2,400 ringgit on
Wednesday.
Palm
oil's geopolitical risk was highlighted during the industry meeting, which
coincided with a prolonged standoff between the Malaysian military and an armed
Filipino group on Borneo island that has forced several refineries there to
slow operations. Improving soybean output from South America, estimated to grow
more than 20 percent this year, may push down palm oil prices to 2,200 ringgit
after mid-April, Mistry added. A higher soybean supply for crushing into
vegetable oil could shift demand away from rival palm oil.
While
prices may slump further on expanding palm oil output in July-August, Mistry
did not foresee prices falling below 1,800 ringgit unless Brent crude
oil drops under $80 per barrel from around $112 on Wednesday. But food and
energy demand for vegetable oil should remain supported by low prices,
especially after the U.S. Congress passed a blending tax credit for biodiesel
in January. "I am estimating world food demand to grow by 3.5 million
tonnes, mainly as a result of lower prices," said Mistry, noting that
biodiesel demand worldwide could expand by about 1 million tonnes this year.
Another
top analyst, James Fry, posted a more bullish view on biodiesel appetite,
saying record high stocks that narrowed Brent crude's premium to palm oil have
encouraged much greater use of the edible oil as fuel in local and overseas
markets. "If I were Petronas or Pertamina today, I would be rushing to buy
local CPO (crude palm oil) to upgrade into biodiesel for blending with diesel,
so as to hold down the costs of supplying motorists with their diesel
fuel," said Fry, adding that the higher demand would help stocks decline
and push prices to 2,625 ringgit by mid-year.
Analysts,
traders and industry officials surveyed by Reuters at the conference saw
average palm oil prices this year declining almost 18 percent to 2,420 ringgit
from last year's 2,958 ringgit. Tax changes in major producers and consumers
that could add more uncertainty to the palm market were also a hot topic at the
conference this year. "Another big unknown is the way Malaysian export
taxes will affect Europe's CPO premium over Brent," said Fry, who is the
chairman of commodities consultancy LMC International.
Malaysia
in October approved a plan to cut crude palm oil export taxes and is setting
the tariff on a monthly basis, as it tries to claw back market share from rival
Indonesia. The export tax for March rose to 4.5 percent from zero percent in
January and February. Analysts were also touting a possible hike in the Indian
import tax aimed at curbing the country's edible oil purchases that have pushed
stocks to a record-high. "I expect that by August to September 2013, the
import duty on unrefined oil will be further hiked to 20 percent and to 27.5
percent on refined oil," Mistry said. The country currently imposes a 2.5
percent import duty on crude edible oil and 7.5 percent on refined products.
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