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VEGOILS-Palm Notches Bigest Weekly Gain in Eight as Malaysia Floods Worsen
calendar29-12-2014 | linkReuters | Share This Post:

(Recasts, adds new analyst quote, updates prices, flood figures)

* Nearly 120,000 evacuated in Malaysia's worst monsoon floods in decades
* Dec 1-25 palm oil exports down 1.4-2.3 pct - cargo surveyors
* India raises edible oil import taxes to protect local farmers
* Palm oil may test support at 2,185 ringgit - technicals

29/12/2014 (Reuters) - Malaysian palm oil futures hit their highest in over a month on Friday, notching their biggest weekly gain in eight weeks as fears of floods disrupting supplies in the world's second-largest producer outweighed earlier losses.

Nearly 120,000 people have been evacuated from their homes as of Friday afternoon, state news agency Bernama reported, in the worst flooding Malaysia has seen in decades as heavy rains pounded the country.

The flooding could reduce crude palm oil output by about 18 percent for December, planters and traders told Reuters, a bigger disruption than had previously been expected.

Market players said despite the strength of the ringgit which was up 0.30 percent to 3.4860 per dollar,
investors will likely refrain from a sell-off on prospects of tighter palm supplies.

"In the short term, there will definitely be some impact on sentiment. The dropping supply is there for sure," said a trader with a foreign commodities firm in Kuala Lumpur.

The benchmark March contract inched up 1.4 percent to 2,249 ringgit ($645) per tonne by Friday's close, after hitting 2,252 ringgit in late trade, their highest since Nov. 19.

After seven straight days of gains, the contract was up 4.5 percent this week, posting the biggest weekly gain since the end of October.

Total traded volume stood at 32,884 lots of 25 tonnes, just below the usual 35,000 lots.

India, the world's biggest vegetable oil buyer, said on Thursday it will raise its import tax on crude edible oils and refined oils by 5 percentage points, in a decision that may dampen palm prices, traders and analysts said.

"This news is negative for palm oil producers as it will raise the cost of imported edible oils, including palm oil in India," said CIMB analyst Ivy Ng.

"This will reduce the competitiveness of palm oil against local edible oils and could hurt demand for palm oil in India," she added.

Meanwhile, cargo surveyor Intertek Testing Services reported that exports of Malaysian palm products during Dec. 1-25 fell 2.3 percent to 1,077,140 tonnes compared with a November - the first drop this month as shipping activity slowed for the year-end holiday season.

Another cargo surveyor reported that exports for the same period fell 1.4 percent.

In other markets, Brent crude oil futures traded steadily above $60 on Friday as a building supply glut and weak Japanese import data weighed on the market, while strong U.S. economic data published over Christmas provided support.

The most active May soybean oil contract on the Dalian Commodity Exchange rose 0.1 percent in late Asian trade.

The U.S. soyoil contract is closed for Christmas holidays and will reopen on Monday.

Palm, soy and crude oil prices at 1030 GMT

Contract Month Last Change Low High Volume

MY PALM OIL JAN5 2250 +33.00 2202 2250 288

MY PALM OIL FEB5 2251 +33.00 2200 2253 1685

MY PALM OIL MAR5 2249 +32.00 2200 2252 18845

CHINA PALM OLEIN MAY5 4932 +0.00 4926 4956 263076

CHINA SOYOIL MAY5 5604 +4.00 5600 5634 203088

CBOT SOY OIL MAR5 32.05 +17.00 0.00 0.00 0

INDIA PALM OIL DEC4 442.80 +17.00 434.70 442.80 749

INDIA SOYOIL JAN5 631.75 +20.85 623.50 634.50 58360

NYMEX CRUDE FEB5 56.37 +0.53 55.68 56.53 19362

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 = 3.489 Malaysian ringgit)
($1 = 6.2129 Chinese yuan)
($1 = 63.62 Indian rupee)