Tuesday, April 19, 2016

How to trade Crude Palm Oil Futures ( FCPO ) 19 APR 2016

#FCPO

 (April 19): Malaysian palm oil futures rose for a second trading day to a one-week high on Tuesday, tracking competing vegetable oils, after suffering losses in the previous two weeks.
The palm oil contract for June delivery on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange was up 0.8% at RM2,688 (US$692) per tonne. It earlier rose to an intraday high of RM2,696, the highest since April 11.
Traded volumes were 50,335 lots of 25 tonnes each, versus the 2015 daily average of 44,600.
Palm tracked the Dalian market and the Chicago Board of Trade higher, a trader based in Kuala Lumpur said.
The market was adjusting to the stronger ringgit, the currency palm is traded in, which has risen against the dollar since early April, the trader added.
"Export figures tomorrow will be interesting given that the ringgit strengthened during the last five days."
The ringgit was up 1.1% in evening trade on Tuesday, reaching 3.8820 against the dollar. A stronger ringgit makes palm oil more expensive for foreign currency buyers.
Cargo surveyors Intertek Testing Services and Societe Generale de Surveillance are scheduled to release export data for April 1-20 on Wednesday. Malaysian shipments for the first half of April had improved from the corresponding period last month, helped by demand from China and India.
Benchmark palm oil prices had reached a two-year high at the end of March as the market went long over concerns of weaker output due to a crop damaging El Nino. March production in Indonesia, the world's top palm producer, is expected to fall to a 13-month low as the dry weather phenomenon hurts yields and lowers output.

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