Palm oil looks for new high

08 Mar, 2007

Palm oil prices are holding on to last year's strong gains, despite a global flight from risky assets, and when industry analysts gather in Malaysia next week they are likely to say that the rally is far from over.
Bullish demand from India to the United States and dry weather hurting supplies in Indonesia could push prices to new highs for the product widely used as a cooking oil but also for cosmetics, soaps and, increasingly, for fuel.
"There is a tremendous demand from the food sector and there is not going to be sufficient supplies of other competing oils," said M.R. Chandran, a leading industry analyst and a former head of Malaysian Palm Oil Association.
Crude palm oil prices soared 40 percent last year on the back of global expansion into vegetable oil-based biofuels, boosting investor fortunes and profits of plantation firms.
Malaysia's key plantation index has jumped 55 percent since January last year.
Malaysian benchmark crude palm oil futures closed at 1,943 ringgit ($553) a tonne on Tuesday, just 6 percent off the eight-year high hit at the end of 2006.
Bursa Malaysia is organising the annual palm oil price outlook conference from March 12 to 14, where industry gurus Dorab Mistry, James Fry, Thomas Mielke and others will present their views and give price forecasts. "More or less the market knows what they are going to say is that things will be even better this year, but how much better that remains to be seen," said Ivy Ng, an analyst with CIMB Investment Bank.
Analysts expect strong demand from the traditional food sector, led by India which is likely to buy more this year after dismal oilseed production. "We are looking at the fundamentals, demand is going to be strong from India because they have not had a good oilseed harvest last year and the impact is trickling into this year," Ng said.
India's oilseeds output in the year ending October 2007 is expected to fall by two million tonnes to 21.98 million tonnes on lower acreage, according to the Central Organisation of Oil Industry and Trade. Traders say India's vegetable oil imports could go up by nearly a million tonnes to 6.1 million tonnes this year.
There will be no let up in demand from China which continues to lead the pack of global edible oil guzzlers, and people in the United States are being told that palm oil is a healthier alternative to hydrogenated oils.
"Transfat issues in the US mean a lot of food producers will switch to palm oil because palm does not produce transfats," said an analyst with a commodities research house. US palm oil imports in 2006 increased nearly 50 percent from the previous year, reaching 625,954 tonnes, and have more than tripled since 2003, US Department of Agriculture statistics show.
Industry officials said global edible oil production is likely to increase by 1.2 to 1.3 million tonnes, just sufficient to meet additional demand from the food sector. "We will have 1.2 to 1.3 million tonnes of additional oil this year and India alone will import one million tonnes extra," said Chandran.
"That is just enough for food and we have not taken biodiesel into account." The edible oil industry expects soybean plantings in Brazil and United States to decline as farmers switch to corn and sugarcane due to strong ethanol demand. And early indications are that Indonesia, the world's second largest palm producer, could have problems with output because of unusually dry weather on El Nino weather pattern.

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