2014年2月7日星期五

Palm oil price firms, but stronger ringgit curbs gains

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian palm oil futures ended higher on Wednesday as investors short-covered positions following some speculative selling in the previous session, but a stronger ringgit curbed gains and kept prices locked in range-bound trade.
    The Malaysian ringgit inched up 0.29 percent to trade at 3.3190
against the greenback late Wednesday, eating into margins for overseas buyers
and refiners.
    Trade volumes were still thin with many market players away for the Lunar
New Year holidays.
    "The market is still staying within the 2,500-2,600 ringgit range," said a
trader with a foreign commodities brokerage in Kuala Lumpur.
    "When prices get closer to 2,500 ringgit, people see it as an opportunity to
buy. And when it moves to 2,600 ringgit it's a sell. I don't think the market is
really going anywhere for now," the trader said.
    By Wednesday's close, the benchmark April contract on the Bursa
Malaysia Derivatives Exchange had gained 0.6 percent to 2,544 ringgit ($769) per
tonne. Prices held in a range of 2,533 to 2,553 ringgit.
    Total traded volume stood at only 21,861 lots of 25 tonnes, much below the
average 35,000 lots.          
    Technicals showed that Malaysian palm oil seems to have stabilised around
its Jan. 28 low of 2,514 ringgit per tonne, and is expected to test resistance
at 2,570 ringgit, said Reuters market analyst Wang Tao.      
    Lingering concerns of weak demand for the tropical oil also weighed on
investor sentiment.
    Malaysia's January palm oil exports fell 11 percent from a month ago to
about 1.3 million tonnes shipped, cargo surveyor data showed, raising worries
that end-stocks in the second-largest producer will continue to climb from the
current 1.99 million tonnes.
    Some market participants are hoping that palm oil supply in January would
have fallen as well, as trees enter a seasonally slower production cycle that is
expected to last through the first half of the year.
    "Some say production could even go down by double digits compared with last
month," said another trader with a foreign commodities brokerage. "If that is
true then stocks should be much lower than December."
    In other markets, Brent crude rose above $106 a barrel on Wednesday
following gains in the U.S. oil benchmark after an industry report showed lower
inventories at the U.S. delivery point and robust heating fuel demand from cold
weather.
    In other competing vegetable oil markets, the U.S. soyoil contract for March
 rose 0.5 percent in late Asian trade. The Dalian Commodities Exchange is
closed for the Lunar New Year and will re-open on Feb. 7.
  Palm, soy and crude oil prices at 1003 GMT
                                                                                                             
  Contract        Month    Last   Change     Low    High  Volume
  MY PALM OIL      FEB4    2545   +24.00    2528    2545     279
  MY PALM OIL      MAR4    2543   +16.00    2532    2548    2577
  MY PALM OIL      APR4    2544   +15.00    2533    2553    8097
  CHINA PALM OLEIN MAY4    5672   -28.00    5630    5704  209596
  CHINA SOYOIL     MAY4    6390   -76.00    6370    6432  299596
  CBOT SOY OIL     MAR4   37.88    +0.17   37.50   37.95    7590
  NYMEX CRUDE      MAR4   98.19    +1.00   97.53   98.26   13608
                                                                                                             
  Palm oil prices in Malaysian ringgit per tonne
  CBOT soy oil in U.S. cents per pound
  Dalian soy oil and RBD palm olein in Chinese yuan per tonne
  Crude in U.S. dollars per barrel
         
 ($1 = 3.31 Malaysian ringgit)- Reuters

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