by winston » Sun Nov 23, 2014 5:15 pm
not vested
CPO price up on lower output prospects
KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian palm oil futures rose on Friday following two days of declines to notch up a weekly gain as the rainy season was expected to curb yields, although sluggish export demand capped gains.
"For November we are seeing a drop between 8 and 10 percent in crude palm oil output," a trader with a local commodities brokerage in Malaysia said.
"But the bearish factors are the uncertainty of crude oil prices and a record crop in South America. And demand for palm olein is bad, especially in the month of December," the trader added. The tropical oil clouds in cold temperatures.
Exports of Malaysian palm oil products fell by 4.6 to 6.4 percent between Nov. 1-20 compared with the same period in October, cargo surveyors reported on Thursday.
The benchmark February contract on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange was up 0.5 percent at 2,239 ringgit ($668) per tonne by Friday's close.
The weekly gain was 1.4 percent.
Total traded volume on Friday amounted to 33,736 lots of 25 tonnes, below the usual 35,000 lots.
Market players said average trading volumes had dropped this week, with most investors avoiding risky bets as they waited for a clearer market direction.
“It can't go down because of lower production," a second palm oil trader said.
"The fundamentals are mixed. We're waiting for new leads," said the trader, who is with a foreign commodities brokerage in Kuala Lumpur.
A close above 2,220 ringgit on Friday could pave way for prices to rise next week to test a resistance level at 2,280 ringgit, he added.
Elsewhere, Fitch Ratings said it expected crude palm oil prices to stagnate between $650 and $700 per tonne in the next 12 months due to stronger edible oil supplies, weaker demand from China and lower crude oil prices.
It added in a report, however, that demand would be underpinned by higher biodiesel mandates in Indonesia and Malaysia.
In other markets, Brent crude oil rose towards $80 a barrel on Friday on speculation OPEC could agree on output cuts at a meeting next week, with strong U.S. economic data also bolstering prices.
In other competing vegetable oil markets, the U.S. soyoil contract for December rose 0.1 percent in late Asian trade, while the most active May soybean oil contract on the Dalian Commodities Exchange rose 0.1 percent.
source: Reuters
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