FCPO
Related News (Fri, July 19)
SINGAPORE, July 18 (Reuters) -
Malaysian palm oil futures edged higher on Thursday after a price slump this
week to seven-month lows attracted buyers, but gains were capped by lingering
concerns over weak demand and rising output. Slowing demand after the start of
Ramadan slashed Malaysian palm oil exports during the first half of July, while
the start of a higher production cycle in the second half of the year also
raised prospects of higher inventory levels this month. "The market fell
quite a lot on Monday and Tuesday and that brought in some buying
interest," said a trader with a foreign commodities brokerage in Kuala
Lumpur. "But concerns remain over slowing demand, especially when
production picks up in the second half of the year."
By Thursday's close, the benchmark
October contract on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange had gained 1.8
percent to 2,291 ringgit ($717) per tonne. Prices hit their lowest level this
year of 2,222 ringgit on Tuesday on bearish fundamentals. Total traded volume
stood at 53,157 lots of 25 tonnes each, well above the usual 35,000 lots.
Prices moved between 2,248 ringgit and 2,294 ringgit.
Analysts said concerns over weaker
demand from major buyers China and India in the second half of the year could
lead to further weakness for palm oil prices, which have fallen nearly 6
percent so far this year. "We believe the resilience of crude palm oil
(CPO) imports to the world's top market, India, could be dented by the steep
depreciation of the Indian rupee," said Standard Chartered analyst Abah
Ofon in a report. "This, coupled with a potentially large edible oilseed
harvest in 2013/14 and renewed concerns about demand from China, suggests that
the CPO market will need to adjust lower," he added. China is the world's
second-largest palm oil buyer after India.
Technicals showed palm oil is biased
to test a support of 2,233 ringgit per tonne, as indicated by its wave pattern
and a Fibonacci projection analysis, said Reuters market analyst Wang Tao. In
other markets, Brent oil fell on Thursday to near $108 a barrel as a
strengthening dollar undercut expectations for rising demand after a third
weekly drawdown in U.S. crude stocks. In vegetable oil markets, the U.S. soyoil
contract for December was up 0.2 percent in late Asian trade. The most-active
January soybean oil contract on the Dalian Commodities Exchange rose 0.4
percent.
Today’s Support and Resistance for
FCPO benchmark October contract is located around 2,270 and 2,310 respectively.
A very informative post for palm oil traders this is.Commodity market is highly price volatile such updates helps to frame a better trading strategy according to the market needs. MCX Tips can also be used for better returns.
ReplyDelete