Palm
oil inventories in Indonesia, the world’s largest producer, may drop 8 percent
this year as a significant increase in demand outstrips record supplies,
according to Derom Bangun, chairman of the nation’s palm board.
Stockpiles
of the oil used in food and fuels may contract to 2.3 million metric tons from
the 2.5 million tons estimated at the end of 2012, said Bangun, who is
scheduled to speak this week at an annual palm conference in Kuala Lumpur
arranged by Bursa Malaysia Bhd. Production may reach an all-time high of about
30 million tons, Bangun said in a phone interview from Jakarta, reiterating a
forecast made on Feb. 18.
The
world’s most-used cooking oil is mired in a bear market as supply and
stockpiles have surged to records. Futures on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives
lost 23 percent last year as an economic slowdown in China and the European
debt crisis curbed demand. Dorab Mistry, a director at Godrej International
Ltd. who’s traded the oil for more than three decades, has said the outlook for
2013 is bearish as global oilseed supplies increase.
“Although
there will be an increase in production in both Indonesia and Malaysia, I
strongly believe that at the same time there will be a significant increase in
demand in India, China, Indonesia and Europe,” said Bangun. “Demand will
slightly exceed supply. So I’m bullish.”
Palm
futures on Bursa Malaysia Derivatives, a unit of the Bursa Malaysia, closed at
2,368 ringgit ($765) a ton on March 1 after dropping for eight days in the
worst run since 2006. Bangun declined to give a price forecast before his March
6 presentation at the Palm and Lauric Oils Conference & Exhibition.
(Source: Bloomberg)
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