Palm oil price reverses gains as India puts import tax cut plans on hold

The benchmark palm oil contract for September delivery on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange closed down 34 ringgit, or 1%, to 3, 370 ringgit ($814.40) a tonne after Reuters reported India’s plan to put import tax cuts on hold.

SINGAPORE: Malaysian palm oil futures reversed earlier gains to fall 1% on Thursday, as top buyer India put its import tax cut plans on hold, although a weaker ringgit limited further losses.

The benchmark palm oil contract for September delivery on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange closed down 34 ringgit, or 1%, to 3, 370 ringgit ($814.40) a tonne after Reuters reported India’s plan to put import tax cuts on hold.

The contract had earlier hit 3, 452 ringgit on India’s move to lower base import prices of crude palm oil to $1, 136 a tonne from $1, 222 a tonne. India uses the base import price to calculate the amount of tax an importer needs to pay. Palm prices were further dragged down by cheaper rival oils and weaker export data.

The Chicago Board of Trade soyoil contract fell over 3%. U.S. soybean futures fell for a seventh consecutive session as a stronger dollar pushed prices to a two-month low.

Soybean oil prices on the Dalian Commodity Exchange meanwhile dropped 1.7%, while the palm oil contract fell 1.4%.

Palm oil is affected by price movements in related oils as they compete for a share in the global vegetable oils market.

However, ringgit falling 0.5% against the dollar limited losses. A weaker ringgit makes palm cheaper for people who hold other foreign currencies. ($1 = 4.1380 ringgit) Earlier Reuters reported:India has put on hold a proposal to reduce import duties on edible oils as cooking oil prices started to fall in the world market after hitting record highs, two government and one industry officials told Reuters.

The world’s biggest vegetable oil importer was considering reducing duties after domestic soyoil and palm oil prices more than doubled in the past year, hitting consumers already stung by record fuel prices and reduced incomes amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We are not cutting import duties now, a more longer term solution has to be found. Cutting duties is not a sustainable solution,” said a government official with knowledge of the matter who asked not to be identified.

A second official, who also requested anonymity, said the decision to leave the import duty structure unchanged was taken as prices were now cooling in the overseas market, pulling the domestic prices lower too.

“The idea is to keep a close watch on international prices and global supplies, and if the situation warrants it, we’ll revive the proposal for a reduction in the duty to protect the interests of both consumers and farmers,” this official said.

Yet even after the recent correction of more than 20%, Indian edible oil prices are still around double their levels a year ago.

Household consumption is expected to decline the longer prices remain elevated.

Demand from bulk buyers like hotels, restaurants and bakeries had already dropped after authorities imposed local lockdowns in response to a devastating second wave of coronavirus infections over recent months, dealers said.

While India deliberated lowering import duties on vegetable oil, benchmark palm oil prices in Malaysia fell nearly a quarter in the last one month, giving some respite to importing countries.

India meets nearly two-thirds of its edible oil demand through imports, levying a 32.5% duty on palm oil imports, while crude soybean and soyoil are taxed at 35%.

It buys palm oil from Indonesia and Malaysia, and soyoil and sunflower oil come from Argentina, Brazil, Ukraine and Russia.

Aside from reducing government revenues, any reduction in import duty could give overseas suppliers an opportunity to raise prices, as palm oil exporters have done in the past, the first official said.

“This should not be repeated,” the official said.

New Delhi has been trying hard to increase oilseed production and reduce dependency on expensive imports.

“We told government this is not the right time to cut taxes. Farmers have started soybean and groundnut sowing. The duty cut would give them a wrong signal,” said a senior industry official.

Indian farmers have started sowing soybean and groundnut in southern and western parts of the country as the monsoon has covered around two-third of the country. – Reuters

Source : The Star

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