Business Standard

Palm oil imports set to hit 6-year low: SEA

- Mumbai, 17 August

India’s palm oil imports are likely to fall 15 per cent in 2017-18 from the year before to their lowest in six years, hit by a hike in import taxes, a weaker rupee and tighter credit for would-be buyers, a senior industry official told Reuters.

Reduced purchases by the world's top importer of the oil, where it is widely used to fry foods such as samosas or bhajis, could pile more pressure on benchmark internatio­nal futures that are already trading near their lowest in three years.

“Local prices moved up due to higher import tax and depreciati­on in the rupee. The price rise moderated demand for imports,” said B V Mehta, executive director of the Solvent Extractors’ Associatio­n of India (SEA).

India in March raised its import tax on refined palm oil to 54 per cent to support local farmers. That made palm cargoes less appealing than shipments of alternativ­e edible oils such as soyoil, sunflower oil and canola oil - at least until import duties on those commoditie­s were raised to 45 per cent in June.

For more than three months palm lost its competitiv­eness in Indian markets relative to other oils due to the higher duty, said Sandeep Bajoria, chief executive of the Sunvin Group, a Mumbai-based vegetable oil importer.

India buys palm oil from Indonesia and Malaysia, with its soyoil mainly imported from Argentina and Brazil. It purchases sunflower oil from Ukraine. In the first nine months of the 2017-18 marketing year that started on November 1, India's palm oil imports fell 9.5 per cent to 6.1 million tonnes (mt), according to data compiled by SEA.

In the last three months of the year, imports could be around 1.8 mt, with an average of 600,000 tonnes per month, Mehta said. Last year, India imported 2.55 mt in the August to October period.

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