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World News:
Futures for palm and soybean oil have increased by 8.5-10% over two sessions, following the rise in soybean prices.
The decrease in the estimated soybean planting areas in the US has shocked the market and led to an 8.5% increase in palm oil prices and a 10% increase in soybean prices over the past two sessions.
September futures for palm oil on the Bursa Malaysia Exchange rose by 5.1% to a three-month high of 3,985 ringgit/tonne or $854/tonne (+8.5% over two sessions) in response to Friday’s rise in soybean and soybean oil prices on the Chicago Exchange.
Even the data from surveying company Intertek Testing Services, showing a 6.9% decline in palm oil exports from Malaysia in June, did not restrain speculative jumps.
On the Chicago Exchange, July futures have seen an increase:
• Soybean oil: up 10% to $1,400/tonne (+9.7% in a week, +29% in a month).
• Soybean: up 5.4% to $574/tonne (+2.8%, +15.7%).
It is worth noting that soybean oil prices have increased more significantly due to soybean stocks in the US being 17% lower than last year as of June 1. As a result, processors have started importing soybeans from Brazil to utilize their capacity and reduce production costs.
On the Dalian Commodity Exchange in China, soybean oil contracts rose by 6%, while palm oil rose by 4.9%.
The rapid increase in soybean and palm oil prices has also supported sunflower oil prices, which rose by 1.7% to $895/tonne for buyer delivery, adding 7% in price over the week.
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