
“The price is bullish in the medium term,” Derom Bangun, deputy chairman of the Indonesian Palm Oil Board, told a conference on Friday, citing a target of $800 a metric ton in Rotterdam, which includes costs and insurance. That compares with Thursday’s close of $760 a ton for the Rotterdam contract.
Palm oil prices have surged this year, bolstered by higher crude oil prices and speculation that demand may increase as the global economy moves out of recession . The Argentine drought has also supported palm oil prices as lower supplies of soybean oil may increase demand for palm oil. The two are substitutes.
Palm oil in Rotterdam has gained 41 percent this year, while the benchmark contract in Asia, traded by the Malaysia Derivatives Exchange, has advanced 49 percent to 2,523 ringgit ($721) a ton. About 90 percent of palm oil is grown here and Malaysia.
India has a “very encouraging increase” in demand, Derom said in Jakarta.
In China, the world’s third-largest economy, demand for palm oil has risen faster than supply, he said.
Derom also highlighted lower palm oil yields earlier this year and declining palm oil stockpiles in Malaysia and Indonesia.
Output from some trees was as much as 25 percent less than estimated in the first two months of the year, he said.
Stockpiles in Malaysia declined to about 1.29 million tons in April, 5.4 percent lower than March, according to data from the Malaysian Palm Oil Board on May 11.
Inventories in Indonesia stood at less than 1 million tons, Bangun said. Unlike Malaysia, Indonesia does not release monthly data.
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