Palm oil, the world’s most-used cooking oil, may climb 16
percent this year as economies rebound in India and China, the biggest
importers, the Indonesian Palm Oil Association said.
Palm may rise to $1,000 a metric ton by the year-end, the
highest price since September, after trading between $800 and $900 in the first
half, Fadhil Hasan, executive director at the growers’ group, said in an
interview in Jakarta on Feb. 5, referring to cargoes delivered in Rotterdam.
The rate was $862.50 yesterday, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Prices of the commodity used in everything from candy to
instant noodles and fuel jumped 15 percent since reaching a three-year low in
December as production in Indonesia and Malaysia, the largest suppliers,
entered the low output cycle. Futures in Kuala Lumpur may rally 12 percent
through the final quarter, says Abah Ofon, an analyst with Standard Chartered
Plc. Dwight Anderson, founder of hedge fund Ospraie Management LLC, said in
December palm was one of his top commodity picks.
“Demand is still fairly strong this year,” supporting
prices, said Hariyanto Wijaya, a Jakarta-based analyst at PT Mandiri Sekuritas,
part of the country’s biggest lender by assets. “Buying will be sustained” even
after India increased import taxes and China tightened quality controls, he
said. India introduced a 2.5 percent tariff on foreign purchases last month and
China toughened inspections.
Expansion in China will accelerate to 8.3 percent through
the third quarter while India’s growth may rise to 6.3 percent in the final
three months from 5.25 percent a year earlier, according to economist estimates
compiled by Bloomberg.
Record Shipments
Indonesia may increase palm production by 5.7 percent this
year to 28 million tons from 2012, said the growers group, known as Gapki, on
Jan. 8. Shipments are set to climb to a record 20 million tons from 18.2
million tons, it said. The country has about 8.7 million hectares (21.5 million
acres) of plantations, with 42 percent owned by smallholders cultivating less
than 25 hectares, said Hasan. Sumatra supplies about 65 percent of production
and Kalimantan 30 percent.
Producer inventories may curb price gains. Stockpiles in
Indonesia have increased to about 4 million tons, said Hasan, while reserves in
Malaysia probably stayed near a record in January at 2.53 million tons,
according to a Bloomberg survey.
The rally “will depend on the recovery of world economy,”
said Hasan. Consumption may also gain on increased use for biodiesel if Europe
can overcome the crisis, he said.
More Ports
Indonesia, the biggest economy in Southeast Asia, needs to
build more roads and ports to support growth of its palm industries including
in Kalimantan on Borneo island, said Hasan.
“The infrastructure when we had output of 10 to 15 million
tons is the same when production was around 20 million tons,” he said. “There’s
not much improvement.” Some Kalimantan producers must ship palm to Belawan and
Dumai ports on Sumatra because of lack of facilities, he said.
Indonesia will probably maintain its export tax policy even
after a proposal from Gapki to cut duties, Hasan said.
“The government policy is not only to encourage the
downstream industry but also to generate revenue,” he said. Gapki proposed
taxes of 5 percent to 10 percent for crude palm and zero to 2.5 percent for
refined products, he said. That compares with a range of 7.5 percent to 22.5
percent now for crude and 2 percent to 10 percent for refined. The crude tax
rate for February is 9 percent.
Indonesia will maintain its export tax policy for now,
Deputy Trade Minister Bayu Krisnamurthi said in a mobile-phone text message
yesterday. “Response to market developments is important, but maintaining
policy consistency is also important,” he said.
Malaysia announced export tax changes last year to reduce
inventories, resulting in a zero tariff for January. The same rate was extended
to February and may remain the same in March if prices stay below the threshold
of 2,250 ringgit, according to Plantation Industries & Commodities Minister
Bernard Dompok.
Futures on the Malaysia Derivatives Exchange, the global
benchmark in Kuala Lumpur, rose 0.2 percent to 2,551 ringgit ($825) a ton
yesterday.
(Source: Bloomberg)
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