Palm hits new 1-week high on China restocking, weather

Friday, 24 December 2010 00:15 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

KUALA LUMPUR,  (Reuters) - Malaysian crude palm oil  futures hit a one-week high on Thursday, as China announced  plans to restock agriculture commodities at a time when  erratic weather globally may curb supplies.

U.S. soyoil for January delivery hit a 28-month high  during Asian trade, as prospects of growing China demand  extended gains in a market already rising on higher biofuel  mandates in South America.     China said on Wednesday it will take a bigger role in importing food staples to shore up reserves of soybeans and corn, which has boosted grains and spilled over to vegetable oil markets.

Big buyers such as China are moving in at a time when hot weather may curb soy and corn production in South America and  rains have started limiting palm oil output in Malaysia and  Indonesia.

“The weather story now includes a China story, which will see gains across most the of the agricultural complex,” said a trader with a foreign commodities brokerage.

“The cold weather in the U.S. is also lifting commodities indirectly via crude oil’s rally above $90 a barrel.”    

Benchmark March 2011 crude palm oil futures KPOc3 on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives rose 1.2 percent to 3,665 ringgit  ($1,170), a level unseen since Dec. 15. By midday, the contract traded at 3,657 ringgit.     Traded volumes stood at 7,184 lots of 25 tonnes each compared to the usual 5,000 lots.     Palm oil is set for its best weekly performance in December, as investors are increasingly favouring agricultural commodities as an inflation hedge since food prices in China and India have been high.

U.S. soyoil rose as much as 0.7 percent to 56.34 cents per pound, the highest since Aug. 1, 2008.     A strike by soy processing plant workers in Argentina, the world’s top soyoil supplier, fanned more concerns on supply that is set to tighten on dry weather limiting soy yields.

The most active Sept. 11 soyoil on China’s Dalian Commodity Exchange jumped 2.2 percent on buoyant external markets although analysts said gains may be limited in the future.

“Higher imports will definitely pressure soybean and soyoil prices in China, which is in line with the government’s plan to curb price hikes,” said an oil analyst with a Shanghai-based brokerage.

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