Palm creeps up on hopes for smaller output rise

KUALA LUMPUR, July 22:  Malaysian palm oil futures edged up in rangebound trade on Monday, fed by optimism that output in July could miss initial estimates, although sluggish exports damped investor appetite.
Palm production in Malaysia, the world’s No.2 producer,  rose 2.3 percent in June, signalling the start of a higher output cycle in the second half of the year.
But a bigger uptick in July could have faltered, as plantation workers get shorter hours during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan to observe a fast that runs from sunrise to sunset.
‘A lot of people still believe that production should be  up against the previous month. But this is the fasting month. I think it won’t be up much, may be less than 5 percent,’ said a trader with a foreign commodities brokerage.
Palm oil exports from July 1 to 20 fell 14 percent from a month ago, cargo surveyor Intertek Testing Services showed, as shipments to India and Europe slackened. Another cargo surveyor, Societe Generale de Surveillance, will release export data late on Monday.
‘The market is still rangebound, between 2,200 and 2,300 ringgit. There is a strong setback from the export figures. Towards the end of the month, exports should roughly be down around 10 to 12 percent,’ the Kuala Lumpur-based trader added.
By the midday break, the benchmark October contract  on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange had gained 0.5 percent to 2,268 ringgit ($713) per tonne. Prices traded in a tight range between 2,245 and 2,271 ringgit.
Total traded volume stood at 7,530 lots of 25 tonnes  each, nearly half the usual 12,500 lots.
Technical analysis showed mixed signals for Malaysian  palm oil as it is stuck in a range of 2,234 to 2,295 ringgit per tonne, said Reuters market analyst Wang Tao.
Global oilseeds prices are likely to edge lower on an  ample supply outlook, with Malaysian refined palm olein prices to average a four-year low of $820 over the next 12 months, said leading vegetable oil analyst Thomas Mielke.
That represents a decline of 3 percent from the $845  average in the year ending June 2013, Reuters calculations showed.
World palm oil production is likely to rise to a record  56.2 million tonnes in 2013 from 53.7 million in 2012, Mielke said in a paper prepared for an online palm oil seminar this week.
In other markets, U.S. Oil continued to trade above Brent futures on Monday, after flipping to a premium for the first time since 2010 in the previous session, while both benchmarks held firmly above $108 a barrel amid hopes of a revival in global demand growth.
In vegetable oil markets, the U.S. Soyoil contract for December rose 0.1 percent in early Asian trade. The most-active January soybean oil contract on the Dalian Commodities Exchange also gained 0.1 percent.

(AGENCIES)