Friday 28 March 2014

RM178b Malaysia Palm Oil Revenue By 2020

Can the figures talk!... No doubt we are just interested on technical trend indicators but as general knowledge here is some important fundamental data that may have giving a good understanding about Malaysia palm oil industry at present according to the news in italic font.

Oil palm trees are planted on 5.23 million hectares, or more than 70 per cent, of the country's agricultural land. (what i know...about 19.2m tons CPO was produced in year 2013)

What I have...For your information: Based on MPOB data on CPO yield (tonne/ha) against FFB yield (tonne/ha) is ... in year 2009 it was 3.93 against 19.20.

... fresh fruit bunches to 26 tonnes per hectare by 2020. (whatI don't know...What will be the CPO price with the RM178b revenue stated in the news?)

...smallholders are responsible for 40 per cent of the total oil palm trees planted in the country.

"In Sarawak, there are 18,513 smallholders who have planted oil palm trees on 94,437ha," he added. 

Source: Bernama

(To MH370 families and friends, Be strong, Life must go on.)

Monday 24 March 2014

Indonesia Palm Oil Output 60 Percent From...

Riau and North Sumatra represent about 60 percent of output, according to Gapki.

Palm oil output in Indonesia, the world’s largest supplier, will probably climb for the first time since September as yields recover from a seasonal decline. (as CPO Futures traders, you must know it)

According to the median of five industry estimates compiled by Bloomberg:
* Production may increase 11 percent to 2.1 million metric tons in March from the previous month.
* Exports expanded 4.4 percent to 1.65 million tons.
* Inventories were unchanged at 2.1 million tons, the survey showed.

Here it means ... February vs March Palm Oil supply and demand in Indonesia in million tons:
Production : 1.89 vs 2.1 up11%
Export : 1.58 vs 1.65 up 4.4%
End stock: 2.1 vs 2.1 - unchange

(As CPO Futures trader, learn to keep such data in your own record can help you learn the fundamentals and may tell you the trend too.)



Source: The Jakarta Globe.

Wednesday 19 March 2014

Indonesia Palm Oil Export 2014 At $22 Billion

What does it mean on $22 Billion on the 21 million MT palm oil export from Indonesia in year 2014? Think about it... here is the news from The Jakarta Globe that CPO futures traders should figure out the meaning of such news which may be important for long term trend for year 2014. Trend is your friend and if the figures tell you the trend, work it out will help you for trading success. 

The Indonesian Palm Oil Association (GAPKI) predicts that 2014 exports of crude palm oil are set to reach $22 billion, up 10 percent from last year, due to a surge in demand and selling price, says Director Fadhil Hasan. 

The association expects exports volume to be between 21 million metric tons and 22 million metric tons, nearly unchanged from last year’s 21.2 million tons.


Tuesday 18 March 2014

El Nino And Soybean Oil Threat On Palm Oil Prices

Here is a good article for novice traders to learn about the fundamentals that may affect CPO Futures on Bursa Malaysia Derivatives, take your time to read it or read from the highlighted words first:

LAUNCESTON, March 17 — Benchmark Malaysian palm oil futures have retreated from 18-month highs, and while prices may struggle in the next few months, the longer-term prognosis is tilted toward further gains.

Palm oil is currently caught in a classic tug-of-war between bullish and bearish factors, but the negative influences are likely to be more short term than the positive drivers.

The bearish side is being led by concern over demand from the world’s top two importers, China and India, ample supply of competing oils such as soy oil and the narrowing of palm oil’s price advantage over other edible oils.

The bullish side can point to falling inventories in major exporter Malaysia, rising domestic demand in top producer Indonesia and the threat of lower supply as the likelihood of an El Nino weather event increases this year.

El Nino is shaping up as the biggest risk for palm oil output this year, with meteorologists saying there is an increased chance of the weather pattern striking this year. El Nino - the Spanish word for boy - is a warming of sea-surface temperatures in the Pacific that occurs every four to 12 years, causing dry conditions in Australia, Southeast Asia and parts of Africa and wetter weather in North America.

A strong El Nino would cut palm oil output in Malaysia and Indonesia by as much as 30 percent, although forecasters haven’t as yet warned of a severe event. Nonetheless, the likelihood is that output will be lower this year in Southeast Asia.

El Nino also tends to make India’s monsoon rains erratic, which may affect the country’s domestic oilseed output given that 55 percent of agricultural land isn’t irrigated and is dependent on rains. This could boost Indian imports of palm oil, which sank to an almost three-year low in February, dropping 27 percent from January to just 403,685 tonnes.

India’s oilseed imports have been muted on expectations of a bumper harvest of the main rapeseed crop this month. However, if this winter’s rapeseed crop is affected by El Nino, it could result in a boost to imports in the second half of 2014, just as palm oil output may be slowing inMalaysia and Indonesia.

China’s imports of palm oil rose in January to 556,523 tonnes, a gain of 17.7 percent over the same month a year earlier. This was also higher than the monthly average in 2013 of 498,256 tonnes. The concern in China is that slower economic growth will hurt demand, but this is based on the assumption that February’s weaker-than-expected exports, industrial production and retail sales numbers are the start of a sustained trend. Assuming that one month’s weak data in China will result in a string of poor numbers is risky, as the authorities have shown they will turn on the stimulus taps if they feel the growth outlook is slipping too much. 

PRICE SPREAD NARROWS, BUT BIODIESEL MANDATE TO SUPPORT

What may be of more concern for demand is the shrinking price advantage of palm oil over soy oil. Converting Malaysian-traded palm oil and Chicago soy oil futures to dollars per tonne shows the discount for palm oil was US$83.40 (RM273.35) a tonne on March 14, down from US$309 (RM1,012) at the start of 2013.

However, the narrowing of the gap is more of a return to historical trading norms, with the premium for soy oil having been anchored around US$100 a tonne for the last five years.

The exception was of a period of widening from mid-2012 to the first quarter of 2013, which coincided with ample palm oil supplies and inventories in Malaysia and Indonesia. But palm oil prices may draw support in the second half of this year from Indonesia’s biodiesel mandate, which was raised in August 2013 to a minimum 10 percent bio fuel in diesel from the previous 3-10 percent range.

However, the Indonesian Palm Oil Association believes it will be difficult for the mandate to be met, given the price increase in palm oil so far this year. Indonesia is expected to use 2 million tonnes of palm oil for blending instead of an initial target of 3.4 million tonnes, association executive director Fadhil Hassan said March 5. Even so, with the production outlook uncertain because of El Nino fears, any increase in domestic palm oil demand will lower the amount available for export. Benchmark Malaysian palm oil futures have gained around 4 percent so far this year, and are currently trading at RM2,763 a tonne, off an 18-month peak of RM2,916 reached on March 11.

Overall, the outlook is for downward pressure on prices in the short term given the question marks over Indian and Chinese demand and the narrowing of palm’s price advantage to soy oil. But this dynamic could reverse in the second half of the year, especially if an El Nino event does materialise.

The shape of the Malaysian futures curve is currently a mild backwardation, with the June contract at RM2,763 a tonne on March 17, and the September contract at RM2,693, a discount of 2.5 percent. This suggests that the market is expecting some price weakness in the next few months, but isn’t yet expecting a supply squeeze later in the year.

In short, the market isn’t yet priced for an El Nino event. The last El Nino in 2009 and 2010 resulted in lower palm oil production in Malaysia, even as the area under cultivation increased. — Reuters.

Monday 17 March 2014

Bloomberg News on CPO Futures 5th Day Drop

Bloomberg news excerpts --

* CPO Futures -3.1% last wk...
* NOTE: Shipments from Malaysia, 2nd-largest producer, -21% to 480,730 mt in 1st 15 days of March m/m, Intertek says March 15
* “Production is dropping, but if exports are also very weak, then there’s a high chance that inventories may rise again,” Arhnue Tan, analyst at Alliance Investment Bank, says by phone from Kuala Lumpur. “On that front, there’s no reason for palm oil prices to continue to trade towards 3,000 ringgit.”
* CPO Futures touched 2,916 ringgit on March 11, highest since Sept. 2012
* Inventories in Feb. -14% to 1.66m mt m/m, lowest since June 2013;
* output -15% to 1.28m mt, while
* exports -1.3% to 1.35m mt, lowest since July 2012 on MPOB data on March 10.
* Soybean oil’s premium over palm at $87.95/mt today; compares with avg of ~$244 in 2013.

Wednesday 12 March 2014

Palm Oil Imports By India - The World Biggest Buyer

Palm oil imports by India, the world’s biggest buyer, probably tumbled for a second month as global prices jumped to the highest since 2012 and refiners awaited supplies from the domestic rapeseed harvest. 

Shipments of the main crude and refined oils fell 30%  to 550,000 metric tons in February from a year earlier, the median of estimates from five processors and brokers compiled by Bloomberg show...

India imports more than 50 percent of its cooking oil demand, shipping palm from Indonesia and Malaysia, the top producers, and soybean oil from the U.S., Brazil and Argentina.

Crude soybean oil imports probably jumped 60 percent to 100,000 tons in February from 62,585 tons a year earlier, while sunflower oil purchases rose to 100,000 tons from 84,310 tons, the survey shows.

Total vegetable oil imports, including for industrial use, dropped 20 percent in February to 780,000 tons. 

Its discount to soybean oil narrowed to $93.27 a ton from an average $195.29 in the past year, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Cooking oil stockpiles at ports and due to arrive to India probably totaled 1.35 million tons at the start of March from 1.52 million tons a month earlier, said Bajoria.

“Consumption should rise in the summer months.” India may harvest 7.23 million tons of rapeseed, the main oilseed grown in the winter season, up from 6.7 million tons last year, the association said, citing estimates by the Central Organization for Oil Industry Trade, on March 10.

Total vegetable oil imports by India are seen at 11.2 million tons in the year started Nov. 1, compared to 10.7 million tons a year earlier, COOIT said.

Source: Bloomberg news

Wednesday 5 March 2014

Thomas Mielke On POC 2014

Crude Palm Oil May Rise To 3177 - Thomas Mielke, Oil World.

KUALA LUMPUR: Riding on the current rally in crude palm oil (CPO) prices, CPO could average at the RM3,177 level a tonne this year, 14% higher than 2013's average. 

ISTA Mielke GmbH Oil World executive director Thomas Mielke said on Wednesday there is little potential upside left from the current high levels but "prices in Rotterdam could still touch or slightly exceed US$1,000 in the next four to eight weeks. 

He explained that this was if palm oil planting regions get the required rainfall. "Assuming rain will fall in the coming weeks (in Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand), I see a limited upside," he said during his presentation on the second day of the Palm and Lauric Oils Conference and Exhibition. 

His projection for the average CPO price for the year was US$970 (RM3,177). Rabobank International's forecast for the 12-month CPO prices was an average RM2,800 per tonne. Its projection for the second quarter of 2013 is higher at RM3,000 per tonne, due to a shortage of soybean oil production in the South America. The high price is expected to dip in the second half of the year.

Source: The Star.

Dorab Mistry On POC 2014

DJPO: Palm Oil Prices to Hit 3000 by June, May Reach 3500 On El Nino - Mistry. 

KUALA LUMPUR--Palm oil futures on the Bursa Malaysia are likely to rise 5% from current prices to MYR3,000/ton by June due to sluggish production, low stockpiles and biodiesel demand, said high-profile industry analyst, Dorab Mistry. 

BMD CPO prices will need to quickly move up to MYR3,000/ton so as to temper demand and enable stocks in Indonesia and Malaysia to be maintained at levels that are feasible for the market, he said at a conference in Kuala Lumpur. 

"Prices should not rise beyond MYR3,000/ton unless climatic conditions change for the worse," he said, referring to current dry weather in Indonesia and Malaysia. 

Should the weather improve with rains arriving next week, the outlook up to June this year remains at MYR3,000/ton, said the London-based analyst, who is also a director at Godrej International Ltd., which trades vegetable oils. Beyond June, prices will depend on the weather. 

Should rains arrive normally, prices are likely to trade in the MYR2,600-MYR2,900/ton level from July to October. However, if the El Nino weather phenomenon develops, BMD CPO will "cling" to MYR3,000/ton beyond June, Mr. Mistry said. With production likely to be affected from late 2014 as a result of that, BMD CPO may move toward MYR3,500/ton, he said. 

The El Nino phenomenon is associated with unusually dry conditions in Asia. Meanwhile, there is a 30% or less chance that palm oil production will surpass expectations if rainfall is better than normal, and if prices of Brent oil fall amid uneventful normal production of world oilseeds, he said. This may send prices below MYR2,400/ton. 

Mr. Mistry was making the forecasts on assumption that Brent will trade in the $100-$110 a barrel range this year, and that the U.S. dollar will be relatively stable. At midday Wednesday, benchmark May BMD CPO closed MYR46 higher at MYR2,847/ton, near a 17-month high hit Monday. 

BMD CPO prices have risen recently due to excessively dry weather in the major producing countries of Indonesia and Malaysia. Together, the two countries account for some 90% of global palm oil production. 

Mr. Mistry is estimating Malaysia crude palm oil production at 19.5-19.7 million tons this year, assuming that the current dry spells end and that rains resume their normal pattern for the rest of the year.

Indonesia is likely to produce 30.5 million tons of crude palm oil this year, just 3 million tons more than this year, with most output growth expected in the last quarter of the year. This production forecast is an "optimistic figure if the current dry weather does not end very soon," he added. As the Indonesian government is boosting the use of palm oil in biodiesel blends, prices are likely to hold high "for a long time", said Mr. Mistry, as the capacity will have to be locked in palm oil prices a year in advance, reducing the availability of freely tradable palm oil. 

For the October 2013-September 2014 oil year, Mr. Mistry says world palm oil production is likely to grow by just 3 million tons or even less, due to impact of dry weather conditions. 

Source: DJPO; Write to Huileng Tan at huileng.tan@wsj.com

Analyst James Fry On POC 2014

DJPO: BMD CPO Futures Likely Just Above 3000 Mid Year - Analyst James Fry. 

Palm-oil futures on the Bursa Malaysia are likely to move just above MYR3,000/ton if Brent crude stays at $110 a barrel, a leading oilseed analyst said Wednesday. 

Current drought and biodiesel demand in Southeast Asia is contributing to supply tightness, London-based consultancy LMC International Ltd. Chairman James Fry told an industry conference. 

"Fears about the future are now driving prices. The current drought will cut Southeast Asian crude palm oil output in the third quarter with a further adverse impact at the end of 2014," Mr. Fry said. 

Rising biofuel mandates will also add to market tightness, he added. 

Both Indonesia and Malaysia have mandated higher palm-oil content in their biodiesel blend which is expected to boost domestic consumption. The two countries account for 90% of world palm-oil supply.

Increased biofuel demand in Southeast Asia will take some heat off a slowing in demand in the U.S. and the European Union, Mr. Fry said. 

Emerging demand for oilseed-based biodiesel from other regions will add to consumption. "We have also seen the emergence of new discretionary demand for imported biodiesel as a cheap fuel in China and in blends into Africa," he said adding the potential demand for biofuels will keep losses limited. 

"The market today is looking ahead--anticipating events in the form of a sharper reduction in stocks than usual," he added. Malaysian palm-oil stocks will fall below 1.5 million tons by June--20% less than the 1.93 million tons in January, Mr. Fry said. 

Source: DJPO; Write to Huileng Tan at huileng.tan@wsj.com

Tuesday 4 March 2014

Indonesia on Biofuel Jump

Excerpts...

Exports may total 21 million metric tons, similar to 2013.
Consumption climbs as much as 38 percent to 11 million tons.
Production expands to 28 million tons to 31 million tons from 26.5 million tons
3.4 million tons of palm will be used for biodiesel this year in Indonesia with fuel to 10 percent from 7.5 percent and power plants had to blend 20 percent from January
Pertamina has already secured 2.4 million kiloliters of biodiesel, 45 percent of the 5.3 million kiloliters it’s seeking for this year and next, the state oil and gas company said Feb. 16.
Shipments of palm and palm kernel oil from Indonesia climbed 24 percent to 21.22 million tons in 2013 from 17.09 million tons in 2010.
Inventories in Indonesia declined as low as 1.8 million tons at the end of 2013.

(according to Fadhil Hasan, executive director of the Indonesian Palm Oil Association, a producer group)

Source: Bloomberg