FCPO
Related News (Fri, May 17)
Crude palm oil futures on Malaysia’s
derivatives exchange end up as investors bought at lower levels following
recent declines. Market chatter about improving export demand in the second
half of this month provided underlying support to the market as well, an
exporter in Pasir Gudang says. A rebound in exports in May could help ease
stocks in Malaysia to 1.80 million tons at end-May from 1.93 million tons last
month, the exporter adds and tips Friday’s trade in a MYR2,300-MYR2,360/ton
band. New benchmark August CPO ends up 0.7% at MYR2,314/ton. CBOT July soyoil
is up 0.2% at 49.43 cents/lb in screen trade. [Dow Jones Newswire]
Malaysian
palm oil futures rose on Thursday as buyers returned after three straight sessions
of losses, and investor sentiment brightened for exports to recover in the
second half of May. Shipments of palm oil fell between 3 percent and 8 percent over
May 1 to 15 from the corresponding April period, fanning concerns that demand
for the tropical oil is slowing, but traders said the decline was smaller than
expected and exports could pick up in the coming weeks.
Traders also
expect output in Malaysia, the world's second-largest producer, to slow this
month and to help further ease stocks that have dipped below the psychological 2-million-tonne
mark to 1.93 million tonnes in April. "There are buyers coming in to
support the market, which can be seen from the increased trading volumes,"
said a trader with a foreign commodities brokerage in Kuala Lumpur. "I've also been hearing that production
this month is not as good as expected. It looks like end-stocks could dip
further, and May's stocks could be the lowest in the whole year," the trader
added.
By
Thursday's close, the benchmark August contract on the Bursa Malaysia
Derivatives Exchange had risen 0.7 percent to 2,314 ringgit ($768) per tonne.
Prices traded in a range between 2,292 and 2,324 ringgit. Total traded volumes
stood at 44,002 lots of 25 tonnes each, higher than the usual 35,000 lots. Malaysia
announced on Wednesday it would set its crude palm oil export tax for June at
4.5 percent, unchanged since March. Top producer and biggest rival Indonesia is
to set June taxes at the end of the month. In vegetable oil markets, U.S.
soyoil for July delivery rose 0.2 percent in late Asian trade. The most-active September
soybean oil contract on the Dalian Commodities Exchange rose 0.1 percent. [Reuters]
Today’s Support
and Resistance for benchmark FCPO August contract is located around 2,300 and
2,350 respectively.
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