Biofuel demand to lift palm oil price soon - trade
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Palm oil prices are set to rise soon on higher demand from biofuel makers and stock building by some consumers, while the credit crisis will have only a small impact on the commodity, a leading industry official said.
Derom Bangun, executive chairman of the Indonesian Palm Oil Association, on Saturday said prices would increase slowly at first but 2009 would be bullish.
On Friday, the most-active December contract on the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange closed up 33 ringgit at 2,313 ringgit ($674) per tonne, having nearly halved since the peak in March.
"The price is now coming to the bottom...I believe the price will soon get stronger," Bangun told the Globoil conference in Mumbai, while leading industry analyst, Dorab Mistry, said prices may fall another 10 percent before they climb.
Bangun said the use of palm oil for fuel would rise as Indonesia and Malaysia planned to encourage the use of biodiesel.
On Friday, Indonesia issued a ministerial decree that will make the use of biofuel mandatory from 2009.
Rising prices for palm oil earlier in the year had led some biofuel producers to temporarily scale back output as it was no longer a cheap alternative to diesel, but Bangun said the fall in prices had again changed the economics of biofuels.
"So we could expect that in the near future, most of these plants will get back into (normal) operation again," he said.
He said low prices were also attractive for manufacturers of palm oil-based products, who made good profits even when prices were much higher. Continued...
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