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India’s edible oil markets braced for a sharp rise in prices after Indonesia banned on palm oil exports, but opinion was divided as to whether the spike will sustain for long because the Southeast Asia nation is sitting on a stockpile it must liquidate.
India and elsewhere palm oil is used in multiple things: cakes, frying fats, cosmetics and cleaning products. It accounts for nearly 60 percent of global vegetable oil shipments, and top producer Indonesia accounts for around a third of all vegetable oil exports.
Soybean oil, too, traded around record levels in Chicago on Indonesia’s sweeping ban while canola in North America neared the record reached in March.
“There will be an availability issue in the short term and there is not much weight drop that one can take beyond a point. Bigger players will have to take price hikes to the tune of 7-10 per cent. Also the industry needs to figure out alternatives to source palm oil,” Venkatesh Viajayaraghavan, CEO at CavinKare, told ‘Business Standard’.
Shipments struck
Reuters reported on Wednesday, that around 290,000 tonnes of palm oil shipments meant for India was struck after Indonesia’s ban.
“Our vessel of 16,000 tonnes is stuck at Kumai port in Indonesia,” Reuters reported quoting Pradeep Chowdhry, managing director of Gemini Edibles & Fats India Pvt Ltd, which buys around 30,000 tonnes of Indonesian palm oil every month.
India is the world’s biggest importer of palm oil and relies on Indonesia for nearly half of the 700,000 tonnes it takes in every month.
It imports around 13-13.5 million tonnes of edible oils annually, of which around 8-8.5 million tonnes (around 63 per cent) is palm oil.
Malaysia as alternative
Buyers are rushing to make purchases from Malaysia, but Kuala Lumpur cannot fill the demand, said Sandeep Bajoria, chief executive of Sunvin Group, a vegetable oil brokerage and consultancy firm.
“Malaysia produces around 19 million tonnes of palm oil per year of which almost 16 million tonnes is exported. Now, if every other country starts buying for Malaysia, where will it have oil to support our annual demand of almost 8.5 million tonnes,” B.V Mehta, Managing Director of Solvent Extractors Association of India told Business Standard.
“Already in the last few days, the Mumbai landed price of crude palm oil has risen by $100 per tonne to $1900 per tonne, while that of RBD Palmolein has also jumped by $100 per tonne to 1980 per tonne,” Mehta added.
Short impact?
Meanwhile, amid the turmoil, most traders and market watchers felt that Indonesia might not be able to hold on to the ban for long.
“Indonesia has to export almost 2.5 million tonnes of palm oil per month or else it will run short of storage space. My understanding is that once domestic prices cool down to around $600 per tonne from the current levels of around $1800 per tonne they will lift the ban,” Mehta of SEA said.
Sanjiv Mehta, CEO and MD of Hindustan Unilever, concurred.
“Overall, if I see there might be an impact in the short term, but looking at the amount of excess production compared to the local needs that Indonesia produces, I do believe that the sales of palm oil ex Indonesia will continue,” Mehta told investors post its earnings conference call.
CRISIL Research, in a note, said Indonesia’s annual palm oil production in 2022 is expected to be near 47 million tons, up by 5 per cent on a y-o-y basis, of which total exports were estimated near 29 million tons, which is more than 60 per cent of total produce.
As per CRISIL’s own interaction with industry stakeholders, in May 2022 production of palm oil in Indonesia is likely to hit around 4 million tonnes.
With no exports in the month of May and 1.5 million tons of domestic consumption (including food, feed & fuel), the country will have a closing inventory of almost 6-6.5 million tons against an annual average of 3.5 million tons.
“As Indonesian refiners don’t have such a huge storage capacity, there are strong chances for prices to fall below Rupiah 14,000/ltrs in the local market in the coming few weeks, post which the export ban could be lifted with some strict regulations,” CRISIL said.
On the local Indian market, CRISIL said if the Indonesian government lifts the ban before year end, the stocks situation would be in a comfortable situation bringing the prices down in the domestic market.
“We don’t see Indonesia not exporting for a long time. All Indian players are waiting for a change in their policy. Since Indonesia is a net surplus export country, there will be a shortage,” Chandrashekhar Reddy, senior VP sales and marketing at Gemini Edibles and Fats India told ‘Business Standard’.
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