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VEGOILS-Palm Slips for 2nd Day, Tracks Losses in Overseas Markets
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* Palm tracks drops in Dalian RBD palm oil -trader

* Russia considers limits on palm oil use in food production

24/07/2015 (Reuters) - Malaysian palm oil futures declined on Thursday, extending losses into a second session, following declines in competing markets and news that Russia was considering imposing limits on the use of the tropical oil.

By the midday break, benchmark palm oil for October delivery on Bursa Malaysia Derivatives was down 0.54 percent to 2,193 ringgit ($576.20) a tonne.

Volume stood at 11,207 lots of 25 tonnes each, below the roughly 13,500 lots usually traded by midday.

"If there's a recovery in afternoon trading in China, there's a possibility palm could come back a bit," said a trader with a foreign commodities brokerage in Kuala Lumpur, noting that palm futures were tracking RBD palm oil futures on China's Dalian Commodities Exchange, as well as U.S. grains prices.

"The US is moving into the planting season now so it's very important that if there's any weather adversity it will be supportive for the grain complex and indirectly for Malaysian palm oil," the trader added.

If palm drops below 2,180 ringgit in the afternoon session, there will be further liquidation, the trader said.

News that Russia was considering imposing limits on the use of palm oil in food production also weighed on prices of the tropical oil.

Technical charts, however, show palm futures may retest a resistance at 2,227 ringgit per tonne, a break above which could lead to a gain to 2,249 ringgit.

In competing markets, the most-active soybean oil contract on the Dalian Commodity Exchange slipped 0.91 percent, while Dalian RBD palm oil for September delivery fell 0.66 percent.

Chicago corn lost more ground on Thursday, falling for a fourth session out of five, and was trading near a three-week low as benign weather across the U.S. Midwest raised hopes of bumper production.

Oil prices held steady, with U.S. crude trading below $50 a barrel near its lowest in more than three months as rising U.S.stockpiles and a strong dollar weighed on the commodity.

The Malaysian ringgit slipped 0.39 percent against the dollar on Thursday. A weaker ringgit makes palm oil more attractive to international buyers holding other currencies.

Palm, soy and crude oil prices at 0507 GMT

Contract Month Last Change Low High Volume

MY PALM OIL AUG5 2187 -18.00 2186 2190 9

MY PALM OIL SEP5 2193 -12.00 2185 2198 3163

MY PALM OIL OCT5 2193 -12.00 2186 2200 5664

CHINA PALM OLEIN JAN6 4896 -58.00 4862 4928 507808

CHINA SOYOIL JAN6 5634 -52.00 5600 5654 374162

CBOT SOY OIL DEC5 31.82 -1.10 31.70 31.90 2770

INDIA PALM OIL JUL5 430.50 -1.10 430.00 431.90 74

INDIA SOYOIL AUG5 574.55 -1.00 573.80 576.00 5050

NYMEX CRUDE SEP5 49.32 +0.13 49.19 49.35 6808

Palm oil prices in Malaysian ringgit per tonne
CBOT soy oil in U.S. cents per pound
Dalian soy oil and RBD palm olein in Chinese yuan per tonne
India soy oil in Indian rupee per 10 kg
Crude in U.S. dollars per barrel

($1 = 3.8060 ringgit)
($1 = 6.2094 Chinese yuan renminbi)
($1 = 63.7400 Indian rupees)