FCPO
Related News (Fri, May 24)
[Malaysia May 1-20 Palm oil Exports
807,232 Tons, down 6.6% on Month – SGS ]
[Malaysia May 1-20 Palm oil Exports
799,405 Tons, down 9.4 % on Month – Intertek]
[Malaysia May 1-15 Palm oil Exports
611,277 Tons, down 3% on Month – SGS]
[Malaysia May 1-15 Palm oil Exports
599,300 Tons, down 7.6% on Month – Intertek]
SINGAPORE,
May 23 (Reuters) - Malaysian palm oil futures rose on Thursday to their highest
in more than a month, stretching gains to a third straight week as investors
hoped for a recovery in demand ahead of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan. Higher
export demand as buyers restock ahead of the event in
July
and easing production could trim stocks further in the world's second largest
producer, whose inventory fell to 1.93 million tonnes by the end of April.
But
bullish sentiment was contained ahead of the long weekend and as traders look
out for further exports data due next week. The Malaysian financial markets
will be closed on Friday for a public holiday. "Although production looks
likely to be lower, stocks level at the end of the month will really depend on
how exports perform for the last ten days. Resistance is at 2,400
ringgit," said a trader with a domestic commodities brokerage in Kuala Lumpur.
The
benchmark August contract on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange gained 0.5
percent to close at 2,370 ($782)ringgit per tonne, slightly off its high at
2,375 ringgit, a level last seen on April 11. Total traded volumes were 32,836
lots of 25 tonnes each, slightly lower than the usual 35,000 lots. Technical
analysis is bullish as it showed a target at 2,388 ringgit per tonne had been
confirmed for palm oil, as it has pierced above a resistance at 2,362 ringgit,
Reuters market analyst Wang Tao said.
For
the week, prices posted a gain of 1.5 percent, despite weaker exports data for
the first 20 days of May, as investors look to restocking demand to support
prices. In other markets, oil fell below $102 a barrel on Thursday in a broader
commodities selloff as a decline in China's factory activity entrenched concern
about weak demand and on worries about an early scale-back in Federal Reserve
stimulus. In vegetable oil markets, U.S. soyoil for July delivery fell 0.4
percent in late Asian trade. The most-active September soybean oil contract on
the Dalian Commodities Exchange fell 0.8 percent.
Next
week’s Support and Resistance for benchmark FCPO August contract is located
around 2,320 and 2,420 respectively.
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