The Borneo Post

China edible oil price slump to hit palm oil imports

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The fall in edible oil prices has been so steep that margins crashed.

SINGAPORE/BEIJING: Steep falls in Chinese edible oil prices have knocked soybean processing margins deep into negative territory, leading to a likely drop in imports of palm oil by the world’s top oilseed buyer.

Higher vegetable oil imports in past months and regular auctions of state rapeseed oil reserves have led to a glut of edible oils, cutting the price of soybean oil futures on the Dalian exchange by 15 per cent since end- January.

Crushing factories in Shandong, a hub for soybean processing in the country’s east, were incurring a loss 253 yuan ( US$ 36.62) a tonne last week, the biggest since early August. Margins were positive between September and February, peaking in December at 407 yuan a tonne.

China’s edible oils, used mainly for cooking, come largely from domestical­ly grown and imported soybeans, imported palm oil and smaller crops such as canola and rapeseed.

Soybeans are crushed into protein- r ich animal feed ingredient soymeal and soyoil. Typically, crush- margins are driven by prices of soymeal, which constitute­s about 60 to 70 per cent of the value of soybeans, but lately weak soyoil has been deemed the chief driver of crush margins.

“The fall in edible oil prices

Source

has been so steep that margins crashed,” said a Singapore-based trader at an internatio­nal trading company with Chinese processing facilities.

The price fall has been driven partly by the unwinding of a burst of speculativ­e buying by local funds of edible oil futures on Dalian that pushed the market to its highest in more than two years in December, drawing in large imports.

“Higher prices on the futures exchange gave a false indication that demand was strong,” said a second Singapore-based trader.

The fallout from the lower prices is expected to hit Chinese demand for palm oil, a tropical oil shipped from Malaysia and Indonesia.

Palm oil comprises more than 70 per cent of China’s edible imports of about five million tonnes a year. The country is the world’s secondlarg­est palm oil buyer.

“We are seeing a selloff in palm oil futures because production is improving and at the same time demand is slowing down, not just from China but India as well,” said a Kuala Lumpur-based trader.

Malaysian palm oil futures slid to a six-month low on Monday.

Talk of China selling old- crop soybean reserves is also raising expectatio­ns of increased edible oil supplies.

“There are rumors that by 2018, the government wants to sell about 4.5 million tonnes of old beans from reserves,” said Tommy Xiao, edible oils analyst at widely-tracked consultanc­y Shanghai JC Intelligen­ce.

Demand for imported soybeans, however, is likely to remain firm due to strong demand for soymeal for animal feed.

The US Department of Agricultur­e has estimated China’s soybean 2016/2017 imports to rise 4.6 per cent to 87 million tonnes as the country rebuilds its pig herd.

Soymeal demand is likely to put even more pressure on soybean oil futures, already at 16-month lows, as it will increase the availabili­ty of the edible oil.

“For April to June soybean arrivals will be quite huge, and we see the crush ( production) will be very big,” said one China-based oilseeds trader. — Reuters

 ??  ?? An employee picks out bad beans from a pile of soybeans at a supermarke­t. — Reuters photo
An employee picks out bad beans from a pile of soybeans at a supermarke­t. — Reuters photo
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