Malaysian palm oil futures hovered near a one-month low and extended losses into a fifth straight session on Friday, tracking weaker soyabean prices in Chicago, while slowing demand growth and higher inventories also weighed. The palm oil contract for August delivery on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange was down 0.92 percent at 2,365 ringgit ($596.69) a tonne by the close.
Trading volume stood at 63,613 lots of 25 tonnes. A Kuala Lumpur-based palm oil trader said palm oil fell because of weakness in the so-called soya complex of soyabeans, soyaoil and soyameal.
The most-active soyabean contract on the Chicago Board of Trade lost 4.9 percent this week. Soyabeans on Friday hit their lowest since February 6 at $9.72-1/2 a bushel. "The palm oil market is lower in line with the weakness in soyabean, which is bearish after the decision by China to start selling soyabeans from its state reserves," said another Kuala Lumpur-based palm oil trader.
China will start auctions of soyabeans from its state reserves on June 14, the National Grain Trade Centre said.
Palm oil is influenced by movements in rival edible oils and oilseeds as they compete for a share in the global vegetable oils market.
Demand for palm oil remains weak.
Malaysia's palm oil exports in May dropped 8.8 percent from April to around 1.2 million tonnes, independent inspection company AmSpec Agri Malaysia said last week.
In Indonesia, the world's top palm oil exporter, shipments of palm and palm kernel oils plunged 13.6 percent in April, data from the Indonesia Palm Oil Association showed.
"We have entered a slower growth phase for palm oil demand and it will reflect in the contract for some more time," said the second Kuala Lumpur-based trader.
Buying for Ramadan has fizzled out as most buyers have already stocked up the vegetable oil.
The Muslim holy month of Ramazan, which began in mid-May this year, is marked by communal fasting and feasting that boosts consumption of vegetable oils, including palm and soya, in the Middle East and across South and Southeast Asia.
A bearish target at 2,364 ringgit remains intact for palm oil, as it stays below resistance at 2,408 ringgit per tonne, said Wang Tao, a Reuters market analyst for commodities and energy technicals.
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