KUALA LUMPUR/MUMBAI, Jan 13: Malaysia's palm oil stocks fell for a third consecutive month in December to hit their lowest since May 2023, as output dropped due to floods, data from the industry regulator showed on Friday.
The drop in inventories in the world's second-largest palm oil producer after Indonesia could support benchmark futures , which have corrected sharply in recent weeks after rising to their highest in about 2-1/2 years in November.
Malaysia's palm oil stocks at the end of December fell 6.91 percent from a month earlier to a 19-month low of 1.71 million metric tons, the Malaysian Palm Oil Board (MPOB) data showed.
Crude palm oil production was down 8.3 percent to 1.49 million tons, the lowest since March 2024, while palm oil exports fell 9.97 percent to a six-month low of 1.34 million tons.
A Reuters survey had forecast inventories at 1.76 million tons, output at 1.48 million tons and exports at 1.38 million tons.
The MPOB data for December is slightly bullish for the market, as inventories dropped more than forecast due to a rise in local consumption, said Anilkumar Bagani, research head of Mumbai-based vegetable oil broker Sunvin Group. —Reuters