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Palm slumps to five-year low

Palm oil extended losses to the lowest level since 2009 on concern that record global reserves of soybeans used to produce an alternative oil may curb demand for the commodity used in everything from food to biofuels.

Futures dropped as much as 2.8 per cent to RM2,115 (US$665) a metric tonne on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives, the lowest level since October 2009, before trading at RM2,131 at 4.42pm in Kuala Lumpur. Prices are down 20 per cent this year, heading for the third annual decline in four years.

Palm, the world’s most used cooking oil, entered a bear market last month as favorable weather in the US boosted the outlook for soybean crops estimated to be the largest on record. Soybeans, corn and wheat are trading near their lowest levels since at least 2010, cutting world food costs measured by the United Nations to a six-month low in July.

“The discount of palm to soybean oil is still very narrow and that will add more pressure on palm,” said Hiro Chai, associate director at CIMB Futures Sdn Bhd in Kuala Lumpur. “As palm production continues to rise until September, we’ll have further pressure” on prices, he said.

Soybean oil declined as much as two per cent to 33.62 cents a pound on the Chicago Board of Trade, the lowest level since September 2009. Soybeans slumped to US$10.3875 a bushel, the lowest since September 2010.

The spread between palm and soybean oil needs to widen to between US$120 and US$130 a tonne for palm to be attractive to users again, Chai said. Palm’s discount to soybean oil shrunk to about US$70 a tonne today from an average of US$244 in 2013, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

US farmers will harvest a record 3.816 billion bushels this year, compared with 3.8 billion (103.4 million tonnes) estimated in July, the US Department of Agriculture said on August 12. World inventories before the start of the 2015 Northern Hemisphere harvests will rise 28 per cent to a record 85.62 million tonnes, the agency estimates.

Palm oil stockpiles in Malaysia, the biggest producer after Indonesia, increased last month from the lowest level since June 2013 as production rose more than expected. While stockpiles at 1.68 million tonnes were lower than the record of 2.63 million tonnes in December 2012, expectations of rising output adding to reserves may pressure prices, Chai said. Output is typically highest from July to October each year.

Production in Malaysia may reach a record 19.7 million tonnes to 19.9 million tonnes, while Indonesia’s output may total an all- time high of 30.5 million tonnes or more this year, according to Dorab Mistry, director at Godrej International Ltd. The two Southeast Asian producers together account for 86 per cent of world supplies.

Refined palm oil for January delivery fell 2.2 per cent to close at 5,440 yuan (US$884) a tonne on the Dalian Commodity Exchange, the lowest since September 2013. Soybean oil slumped 3.2 per cent to end at 6,112 yuan, the lowest since March 2009.-- Bloomberg

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