FCPO Related News (Fri, June 7)
KUALA LUMPUR, June 6 (Reuters) -
Malaysian palm oil futures rose to the highest in more than two months on
Thursday, buoyed by optimism that stocks of the tropical oil in the world's second
largest producer could have dropped in May. A Reuters survey on Wednesday
showed that end-stocks in Malaysia may have eased to 1.78 million tonnes last
month, their lowest in almost a year, as exports and domestic consumption offset
near-stagnant production. Investors are now awaiting official stocks and output
data scheduled to be released by industry regulator the Malaysian Palm Oil
Board (MPOB) on Monday for more trading cues.
Export data for the first ten days
of June will also be announced on the same day. "Today the market is
supportive because of the follow through from Wednesday's gains -- now there's
expectations that stocks would fall below 1.8 million tonnes," said a
trader with a foreign commodities brokerage. "Traders are waiting for next
week's MPOB report and export data. Exports in June 1-10 should be around
400,000 tonnes, slightly better than May 1-10, as we move into the festive month,"
the Kuala Lumpur-based trader added, referring to the Muslim holy month of
Ramadan, which begins in July this year. At market close, the benchmark August
contract on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange rose 1.3 percent to 2,434
($790) ringgit per tonne, slightly below its intraday high at 2,436 ringgit,
its loftiest since March 27.
Total traded volumes stood at 28,268
lots of 25 tonnes each, thinner than the average 35,000 lots as traders stayed
on the sidelines ahead of next week's data. Technicals showed palm oil faces
resistance at 2,420 ringgit per tonne, a break above which will lead to a
further gain towards 2,457 ringgit, Reuters market analyst Wang Tao said. Palm
oil is on track to post its fifth straight weekly gain, after prices in May
climbed nearly 5 percent due to restocking ahead of Ramadan, despite weaker
demand from the world's second biggest buyer China. Communal feasting during
Ramadan typically drives up edible oil consumption. Prices of the edible oil
have also been supported by a steady decline in stocks, from a record high of
2.63 million tonnes in December, as seasonally weaker production in the first half
of the year helped offset sluggish exports.
In other markets, Brent edged
further above $103 a barrel as a drop in U.S. oil stocks and news of lower
Iranian exports outweighed worries that the U.S. Federal Reserve may scale back
its economic stimulus. In vegetable oil markets, U.S. soyoil for July crept up
0.2 percent in late Asian trade. The most-active September soybean oil contract
on the Dalian Commodities Exchange ended almost unchanged.
Today’s Support and Resistance for
benchmark FCPO August contract is located around 2,420 and 2,460 respectively.
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