Expert: Palm oil prices have reached the floor
10/11/2008 (Xinhua), Kuala Lumpur - Vegetable oils forecast expert Thomas Mielke believes palm oil prices have bottomed out and expects sharp increases ahead, Malaysian media reported on Monday.
"I believe prices have reached the floor two weeks ago and the market is now in transition," Mielke told a forum of more than 100palm oil traders in Petaling Jaya, satellite city of Kuala Lumpur, over the weekend.
Eight months ago, palm oil futures soared to its record high of 4,486 ringgit (1,271 U.S. dollars) per ton but have since fallen. Two weeks ago, it closed as low as 1,390 ringgit (394 U.S. dollars) per ton, 70 percent off its record. Last Friday, the third month benchmark palm oil futures on Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Market closed at 1,609 ringgit (456 U.S. dollars) per ton.
Palm oil demand is strong but was recently not reflected in Malaysia and Indonesia's palm oil exports because some buyers in India and China find it hard to borrow money from the banks, he said.
The current global financial crisis which started in the United States (U.S.) and spread to Europe, South Korea, Japan and Singapore, has prompted many banks to be more selective in extending letter of credits to vegetable oil buyers.
"The recent hand-to-mouth buying was caused by difficult access to bank financing. The pipelines have dried up and demand is mounting," said Mielke, who is Oil World's editor-in-chief.
The Oil World trade journal, published since 1958, is widely subscribed by vegetable oil traders in more than 100 countries. Mielke's opinion, backed by import and export statistics collected from vegetable oil consuming and producing countries, is highly sought after.
Mielke said "it is just a matter of time" before there will be sharp increases in palm oil prices because the current low prices have started to stimulate global demand for food, oleochemicals and fuel.
"Several governments, including Malaysia and Indonesia, have initiated accelerated biodiesel usage via flexible mandates," the New Straits Times quoted Mielke as saying.
In justifying upward trend in palm oil prices, Mielke cited statistics indicating less plantings of soya bean in favor of corn for ethanol in the U.S. and more replantings of oil palm trees in Malaysia and Indonesia.
These lead to little or no growth in next year's global output of vegetable oils but sustained demand, hence providing support to pricing.