PALM NEWS MALAYSIAN PALM OIL BOARD Friday, 03 Apr 2026

Jumlah Bacaan: 154
MARKET DEVELOPMENT
Top Metals Forecaster Says Palm’s Outlook Beats Gold on Nino
calendar02-07-2015 | linkBloomberg | Share This Post:

02/07/2015 (Bloomberg) - Tropical commodities including palm oil are favored over gold and copper in the second half, according to Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp., which warned of rising risks to farm supplies from the El Nino weather pattern.

Palm oil was seen at 2,300 ringgit ($609) a metric ton in the final quarter, from 2,253 ringgit on Thursday, analyst Barnabas Gan wrote in a report. Gold will probably tumble to $1,050 an ounce as higher U.S. borrowing costs strengthen the dollar, said Gan, who’s the most-accurate forecaster for precious metals according to Bloomberg Rankings. Copper may slump about 5 percent to $5,500 a ton on ample inventories.

El Ninos have the potential to affect weather and harvests worldwide by baking Asia, dumping rain across South America and bringing cooler summers to North America. This year’s event, the first since 2010, poses a risk to the global economy as it may harm crops and boost inflation, according to Citigroup Inc. Rice may rally in the second half if supplies get parched in many countries, Duangporn Rodphaya, director-general at Thailand’s Department of Foreign Trade, said on Wednesday.

“With the introduction of El Nino, weather extremities have already dealt drought pangs in Thailand,” Gan wrote. The country is the world’s top rice shipper. Agricultural commodities like palm oil and coffee are likely to see supply shocks should poor weather be seen, he wrote.

Record Event

This year’s El Nino is strengthening as the Pacific Ocean warms, and some data patterns are similar to the event in 1997-98, Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology said in a forecast last week. That was the strongest pattern on record, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

In the coming months, weather events driven by the El Nino may take center stage in determining the price of palm oil and related commodities, Ivy Ng, an analyst at CIMB Investment Bank Bhd., wrote in a report on Wednesday. Malaysia’s palm oil shipments probably climbed in June amid restocking by some customers on the back of El Nino concerns, she said.

Gold will tumble as prospects for higher U.S. borrowing costs strengthen the dollar, said Gan, who forecasts the Federal Reserve will raise rates in September. Spot bullion dropped as low as $1,164.76 an ounce on Thursday, the lowest level since June 5, according to Bloomberg generic pricing.