The Borneo Post

MPOC expects CPO to trade at RM4,000-RM4,200 a tonne in April

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Crude palm oil (CPO) prices, which surged in March 2024 to hit a peak of RM4,327 a tonne, are expected to move within a stable range of RM4,000 to RM4,200 a tonne this month, according to the Malaysian Palm Oil Council (MPOC).

In the April 2024 issue of its Palm Pulse newsletter, the council said the dynamics of the palm oil market for the month are influenced by several key factors, namely increased palm oil production, improved palm oil imports, and a recovery in soft oil prices.

Anticipate­d higher monthon-month (m-o-m) palm oil production from April onwards is likely to limit a palm oil price rally, it said.

“Generally, the trend in palm oil prices aligns with its production and inventory trends, with prices typically strengthen­ing from November and peaking in February or March,” it said.

On imports by key markets, MPOC said that in the upcoming months, China and India are anticipate­d to ramp up their imports of edible oils to offset the bearish sentiment, resulting in rising production and stocks.

“The edible oil inventory in both countries has dwindled to its lowest level since November 2022.

“This decline is attributed to the significan­t reduction in edible oil imports by China and India from November 2023 to February 2024, with China experienci­ng a 34 per cent decline and India a 21 per cent decline compared to the correspond­ing period in the previous year,” it said.

According to MPOC, soft oil prices, particular­ly for sunflower oil, are anticipate­d to rebound in the near term.

It said sunflower oil prices led the decline in the soft oil price dynamics from January to March 2024, largely due to the burdensome export supply from the Black Sea region.

“However, according to Oil World projection­s, sunflower oil production growth in the Black Sea region for the 2023/2024 marketing year is anticipate­d to occur in the first half of the season.

“Consequent­ly, year-onyear (y-o-y) production is expected to decline from April to September 2024, suggesting that the price pressure from sunflower oil supply is poised to diminish moving forward,” MPOC said.

In February 2024, Malaysia’s end-month palm oil stocks continued its downward trend for the fourth consecutiv­e month, decreasing by 5.0 per cent m-o-m to 1.92 million tonnes from 2.02 million tonnes in January.

However, on a y-o-y basis, the decline was steeper at 9.4 per cent from 2.12 million tonnes in February 2023.

MPOC said there was a significan­t rise in both export and domestic consumptio­n of palm oil in the first two months of 2024, collective­ly increasing by 174,264 tonnes from the correspond­ing period in 2023.

“However, production only experience­d a modest increase of 27,944 tonnes during the first two months of 2024.

“This indicates that the surge in demand outpaces the growth in supply by a staggering 623 per cent,” it added. — Bernama

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