Palm Oil Remains Weak
2026-05-14 03:18
By
Farida Husna
1 min. read
Malaysian palm oil futures traded below MYR 4,450 per tonne, extending losses that began in early May and notching their lowest level in a month.
A stronger ringgit weighed on sentiment, alongside weakness in rival edible oils traded on the Dalian and Chicago exchanges.
So far this week, contracts have declined around 2.2%, dragged by softer demand in the key buyer India.
According to the Mumbai-based Solvent Extractors’ Association of India, the country’s palm oil imports plunged 26% in April from the prior month to the lowest level in four months, as weak institutional demand and a recent price rally narrowed palm oil’s discount against competing oils, discouraging refiners from increasing purchases.
Meanwhile, export signals for May were mixed: AmSpec Agri noted shipments down 10.8%, while Intertek reported an 8.5% rise.
Traders now keep an eye on a Beijing summit between U.S.
President Trump and China’s Xi Jinping, with agricultural trade expected to stay in focus.