KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian palm oil futures snapped snap a four-session decline on Friday evening, seeing its strongest gains in nearly three weeks, on a weaker production outlook and tracking overnight gains in US soyoil.
The benchmark palm oil contract for September delivery on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange was up 1.5 per cent at 2,284 ringgit ($570.86) per tonne at the close of trade, its strongest intraday gain since July 5. Palm oil futures have been camped in negative territory for most of this month, and the contract is down 2.1pc this week, marking its fourth straight weekly decline. Trading volumes stood at 38,600 lots of 25 tonnes each at the close of trade. “Falling production seems to be supportive of the market,” said a Kuala Lumpur based trader, as this will ease stockpiles.
Malaysian palm oil output declined 2.1pc to 1.53 million tonnes in May, according to official data from an industry regulator, marking a second consecutive monthly fall.
Palm was also tracking strength in soyoils on the US Chicago Board of Trade, said traders at the market’s midday break. The Chicago July soybean oil contract was up 0.3pc on Thursday, while September soybean oil on China’s Dalian Commodity Exchange edged down 0.1pc.
Published in Dawn, June 23rd, 2018
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