Malaysia May Act Should Palm Oil Drop `Drastically’
By Manirajan Ramasamy and Feiwen Rong
Aug. 26 (Bloomberg) —
“We might need to take immediate measures” if prices “drop drastically below 2,000 ringgit ($590) a ton,” Chin said in a phone interview. The price tumbled as much as 7.5 percent today to 2,406 ringgit a ton.
Palm oil, used in cooking and as an alternative fuel, has slumped 11 percent in two days as supplies from
“Production is improving in 2009 and 2010 so prices will continue to fall,” Nirgunan Tiruchelvam, assistant director at ABN Amro Securities (
Palm oil closed 7.4 percent lower at 2,409 ringgit a ton today on the Malaysia Derivatives Exchange. That’s above an Aug. 19 low of 2,351 ringgit and compares with the record 4,486 ringgit on March 4.
Wilmar shares dropped 2.7 percent to S$3.64, their lowest close in more than five months. Sime Darby Bhd., the world’s largest publicly traded oil palm grower, fell 1.5 percent to 6.45 ringgit in
`Clear’ Stockpiles
The country’s stockpiles reached a record 2.04 million tons in June before declining to 1.98 million tons in July, according to the Malaysian Palm Oil Board.
“Last month, we had an oversupply of 2.1 million tons,” Chin said. “That’s too much and we must understand that it’s not only
The two countries produce almost all the world’s palm oil.
Mistry’s Outlook
Palm oil must drop to 2,200 ringgit a ton in the next few weeks for demand to recover, Mistry said.
“We have at present a deadly cocktail of rising production combined with some demand rationing,” he said. “Prices have to go to the level where they create strong demand growth.”
The slump in palm oil prices has prompted













