Palm oil prices higher

Published October 15, 2008

JAKARTA, Oct 14: Malaysian palm oil futures finished up 0.82 per cent on Tuesday, extending a rebound from a day earlier, but off their best amid concerns that the demand outlook remains weak, traders said.

The price rebound had been mainly driven by short-covering after a rally in crude oil prices amid hopes the current financial crisis is easing, they said. The benchmark December contract on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange rose 15 ringgit, or 0.82 per cent, to 1,850 ringgit a ton, coming off a high of 1,902 ringgit earlier.

Contracts of other traded months were mixed. The overall volume was 14,569 lots of 25 tons each. It is, however, still quite difficult to assess how long the rebound can be sustained, an analyst at a Jakarta-based brokerage said.

Our house had forecast a crude oil price for 2009 at $80 a barrel but apparently we may lower it after recent falls, the analyst said, adding the revision could also mean there was room for palm oil to decline.

The concern still centres on demand, such as from China and India. So I think people are still cautious, the analyst said.

In the physical market, Malaysian crude palm oil for October stood at 1,850/1,870 ringgit a ton in the southern and central regions.

Trades were done at 1,870-1,880 ringgit a ton in the southern region, and 1,860-1,890 ringgit a ton in the central region.

In Indonesia, the world’s biggest palm oil producer, prices were mixed.

In Jakarta, the state marketing centre, which sells palm oil from state plantations, said it sold 9,500 tons of palm oil in an auction, where the highest price obtained was 4,818 rupiah ($0.49) per kg, against 4,938 rupiah last Friday.

Producers in Medan -- home to Belawan port, Indonesia’s key port for palm oil exports -- also sold palm oil at 4,885 rupiah per kg. There was no auction on Monday or on Friday.

Meanwhile, refiners offered refined, bleached, deodorised (RBD) palm olein, which is used in cooking oil, at 5,550-5,600 rupiah per kg, up from 5,350-5,450 per kg on Monday.—Reuters

Must Read

Opinion

Editorial

The ban question
Updated 02 Dec, 2024

The ban question

Parties that want PTI to be banned don't seem to realise they're veering away from the very ‘democratic’ credentials they claim to possess.
5G charade
Updated 02 Dec, 2024

5G charade

What use is faster internet when the state is determined to police every byte of data its citizens consume?
Syria offensive
Updated 02 Dec, 2024

Syria offensive

If Al Qaeda’s ideological allies establish a strong foothold in Syria, it will fuel transnational terrorism.
Flying ban reversal
Updated 01 Dec, 2024

Flying ban reversal

Only the naive can expect the reinstatement of European operations to help restore PIA’s profitability.
Kurram conflict
01 Dec, 2024

Kurram conflict

DESPITE a ceasefire being in place, violence has continued in Kurram tribal district. The latest round of bloodshed...
World AIDS Day
01 Dec, 2024

World AIDS Day

IT is a travesty that, decades after HIV/AIDS first perplexed medics, awareness about the disease remains low in...