The Sun (Malaysia)

Palm oil stocks fall to lowest since June 2017

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KUALA LUMPUR: Palm oil inventorie­s fell a fifth straight month amidst tighter production and slower demand, with January end-stocks below two million tonnes, official data showed yesterday.

January stocks in Malaysia slumped 12.7% to 1.76 million tonnes from the previous month, lowest since June 2017, data from the Malaysian Palm Oil Board (MPOB) showed.

Inventorie­s and output in the world’s second-largest palm oil producer have been falling since September last year due to dry weather and lower fertiliser applicatio­n earlier in 2019.

January production fell 12.6% from the previous month to 1.17 million tonnes, the lowest monthly figure since February 2016, according to MPOB.

The decline in stocks and production was in line with market expectatio­ns, traders and analysts said.

“Weather had an impact mainly on the January inventorie­s. We should follow output carefully moving forward, including the forecastin­g for February-March,“said Marcello Cultrera, institutio­nal sales manager at Phillip Futures in Kuala Lumpur.

Meanwhile, exports in January took a hit after lower purchases from top buyers India and China, with exports falling 13.2% from December to 1.21 million tonnes, the MPOB data showed.

Exports fell on India’s import curbs on refined palm oil and a political tiff that kept the South Asian nation from buying Malaysian palm oil. Additional­ly, the coronaviru­s epidemic and extended Lunar New Year holidays have disrupted demand from China, a Kuala Lumpur-based trader said.

The lack of overseas demand has been pressuring palm oil prices over the last few sessions. Yesterday, palm oil was down more than 1% at close to RM2,770 a tonne.

Eventually, though, the tight supplies will support prices to trade higher, said Satia Varqa, co-founder of Singapore-based Palm Oil Analytics.

A Reuters survey had forecast January end-stocks to tumble around 12% to 1.76 million tonnes, while production was forecast to fall 9% to 1.21 million tonnes. Exports were forecast to fall 8.2% to 1.28 million tonnes. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Inventorie­s and output have been falling since September last year due to dry weather and lower fertiliser applicatio­n in 2019. –REUTERSPIX
Inventorie­s and output have been falling since September last year due to dry weather and lower fertiliser applicatio­n in 2019. –REUTERSPIX

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