RTRS:VEGOILS-Palm oil ends higher; global growth worries weigh
* Palm oil to range 3,244-3,292 ringgit -technicals
* Indonesia keeps palm export tax at 16.5 pct for March
(Updates throughout)
By Chew Yee Kiat
SINGAPORE, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Malaysian crude palm oil
futures closed higher on Friday, although gains were capped as
investors were wary that rising oil prices could hurt global
economic growth and commodity demand.
Emerging concerns that No.2 edible oil consumer China's
demand for the tropical oil could ease on high stock levels may
further depress prices that rose more than 6 percent this month
alone.
"China's demand for palm oil will slow down as its economy
is slowing and the government is trying to maintain slow
growth," said a Singapore-based physical trader with a local
trading company.
Benchmark May palm oil futures on the Bursa
Malaysia Derivatives Exchange inched up 0.1 percent to close at
3,276 ringgit ($1,088) per tonne. Prices hit a high of 3,294
ringgit on Wednesday, the highest since June 9 last year.
Traded volumes were thin at 19,442 lots of 25 tonnes each,
compared to the usual 25,000 lots.
Reuters analyst Wang Tao said prices will consolidate in a
range of 3,244-3,292 ringgit per tonne based on technical
analysis.
Malaysian palm oil exports for the first 20 days of February
fell 2 percent and 0.6 percent from a month ago, according to
cargo surveyors Intertek Testing Services and Societe Generale
de Surveillance, respectively.
That indicated an improvement in demand prospects compared
to a 14 percent decline for the first 15 days of the month. An
improving demand outlook for the edible oil has lifted the
futures market, which is up 1 percent this week.
But traders were starting to focus on a probable slowdown in
Chinese demand. China is the world's second largest palm oil
importer.
"China's imports of palm oil will definitely be going down
as stock level is now at 900,000 tonnes, almost a million
tonnes. Normally, stock level ranges from 400,000-500,000
tonnes," said a China-based trader with a foreign trading house.
Top palm oil producer Indonesia will keep its export tax for
palm oil unchanged at 16.5 percent and its tax on refined palm
olein at 8 percent for March, a trade ministry official said on
Friday.
Oil rose towards $124 a barrel on Friday, heading for a
fifth straight weekly gain, as concern over cuts in Iranian
supply offset worries that high oil prices could restrain
demand.
In related vegetable oil markets, the U.S. soyoil contract
for March delivery fell 0.1 percent and the most active
September 2012 soyoil contract on China's Dalian
Commodity exchange were almost flat owning to depressed demand.
Palm, soy and crude oil prices at 1005 GMT
Contract Month Last Change Low High Volume
MY PALM OIL MAR2 3232 +7.00 3210 3237 271
MY PALM OIL APR2 3260 +5.00 3234 3266 1200
MY PALM OIL MAY2 3276 +4.00 3251 3281 10522
CHINA PALM OLEIN SEP2 8348 +14.00 8312 8374 110988
CHINA SOYOIL SEP2 9362 -4.00 9352 9412 302636
CBOT SOY OIL MAR2 54.14 -0.06 53.99 54.20 5184
NYMEX CRUDE APR2 108.41 +0.58 108.19 108.70 17325
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
Crude in U.S. dollars per barrel
* Bursa Malaysia holds its annual Palm and Lauric Oils
Conference & Exhibition Price Outlook 2012 from March 5 to 7 in
Kuala Lumpur. For details, see www.pocmalaysia.com
($1=3.0100 ringgit)