Business

Analysts bullish on palm oil as inventories fall to one-year low in March

A wider soybean oil-palm oil price gap makes palm oil more attractive for price sensitive buyers, they add

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 12 Apr 2022 12:53PM

Analysts bullish on palm oil as inventories fall to one-year low in March
CGS-CIMB Securities Sdn Bhd analyst Ivy Ng Lee Fang projects palm oil stocks to rise 2.6% month-on-month to 1.51 million tonnes by end-April 2022F. – The Vibes file pic, April 12, 2022

KUALA LUMPUR – Public Investment Bank Bhd (PIVB) has maintained its “overweight” rating on the plantation sector with a full-year crude palm oil (CPO) price forecast of RM4,300 per tonne.

PIVB analyst Chong Hoe Leong said the rating was made after Malaysia’s March 2022 palm oil inventories fell more than expected and touched their lowest level in a year of 1.47 million tonnes, along with the biggest monthly exports increase since September last year.

“Palm oil exports advanced 14% month-on-month (m-o-m) to 1.26 million tonnes, driven by all major consuming countries, namely China, the European Union, India, Pakistan, and the United States,” he said in a note today.

Chong said a wider soybean oil-palm oil price gap would also make palm oil more attractive for price sensitive buyers like India and Pakistan ahead of the Aidilfitri celebration.

He said soybean oil’s premium to palm oil price expanded to the current level of US$203 (RM859) per tonne from US$96 per tonne previously, registering the steepest increase in eight months as softer soybean production in South America pushed the soybean prices dramatically in recent months.

In a separate note, CGS-CIMB Securities Sdn Bhd analyst Ivy Ng Lee Fang projected palm oil stocks to rise 2.6% m-o-m to 1.51 million tonnes by end-April 2022F (forecast).

She also expected palm oil output to fall 3.0% m-o-m by end-April 2022F due to shortages of workers, and exports to decline 10% m-o-m on competition with Indonesia’s palm oil exports.

“We believe CPO prices will trade at RM6,000-7,000 per tonne in April 2022F due to lower export supplies of sunflower oil crops from Russia and Ukraine and higher demand ahead of the Aidilfitri festival on May 2 to 3.

“However, this is partly offset by higher export supplies from Indonesia after it decided to abolish domestic marketing obligations on March 20, 2022 and replace it with a higher export levy,” she said.

Ng said Malaysian planters are likely to see strong earnings in the first quarter of 2022F (Q1 2022F) as average CPO prices rose 55% year-on-year (y-o-y) and 19% quarter-on-quarter to RM6,039.5 per tonne, and CPO output grew 4.0% y-o-y in Q1 2022F.

“We keep our average CPO price forecast of RM4,100 per tonne and ‘neutral’ sector rating,” she said. – Bernama, April 12, 2022

Related News

Business / 2y

China committed to increasing palm oil imports next year, says Fadillah

Malaysia / 2y

Anwar, Dutch PM Rutte meet in Putrajaya for bilateral talks

Malaysia / 2y

M’sia to rope in foreign scientists, experts to mend palm oil image: Fadillah

Business / 2y

Boost for M'sian palm oil from African buyers with RM182 mil in potential sales

Business / 2y

‘Industry players seeking windfall profit levy price review for Sabah, S’wak’

Business / 2y

Palm oil exports to EU-27 to surpass 1.5 mil tonnes: MPOC

Spotlight

Community

Penang new top cop looks to AI to help fight online fraud

By Ian McIntyre

World

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer announces resignation

Malaysia

Zara Inquest: Court to decide in July whether stepsister to testify

Malaysia

Future of our nation rests on the rakyat, not political monkeys

Malaysia

Bersama to contest 15 Johor seats in upcoming state election

Malaysia

Middle East conflict: Costs to Malaysia rise close to 20%, raising food production pressures

Malaysia

MACC probes elephant transfer deal after RM53 million leak claims surface

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Malaysia, Bangladesh seek solution to Rohingya ethnic issue through ASEAN

You may be interested

Business

Dollar holds firm as US-Iran diplomacy lifts market sentiment, yen tests intervention threshold