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Unisem fair value cut on 'gloomier' outlook Posted: 27 Jul 2011 06:43 PM PDT Unisem Bhd, a Malaysian semiconductor company, fell to its lowest level in almost 19 months after its "fair value" was cut at OSK Research Sdn Bhd to reflect a "gloomier" outlook for the second half of the year. The stock dropped 1.4 per cent to RM1.38, bound for its lowest close since Jan. 5, 2010. The company's fair value was reduced to RM1.31 from RM1.48, OSK said in a report today. -- Bloomberg |
Palm oil may fall to RM2,800 in Sept: Mistry Posted: 27 Jul 2011 06:00 PM PDT Palm oil may slump to as low as RM2,800 (US$952) per metric ton in September as output jumps in Malaysia and Indonesia, the world's two largest growers, according to Dorab Mistry, director of Godrej International Ltd. Malaysia may produce 19 million tons in 2011, 2 million more than last year, Mistry told a symposium in Sydney today, according to an advance copy of his remarks. Indonesian output may gain 3 million tons to 25.5 million tons, said Mistry. Palm oil traded at RM3,134 at 5:23 p.m. in Singapore yesterday. Lower palm oil prices may help to ease global food costs that rallied to a record in February, according to a United Nations gauge, and held within 2 percent of that peak in June. Mistry, who's traded the oil used in food and fuels for more than three decades, forecast a rebound to RM4,000 in 2012. By September, "the peak summer demand will have gone, Indonesian biodiesel production will slow down dramatically and CPO production will rise strongly," Mistry said according to the remarks, referring to crude palm oil by its initials. Malaysian stockpiles will reach a record in December, he said. Sime's Forecast Lower palm oil prices may hurt growers such as Malaysia's Sime Darby Bhd, the world's biggest listed producer. Palm oil may remain at about RM3,000 for the rest of the year on good demand, Franki Anthony, Sime Darby's plantation managing director, said on July 22. Mistry's forecast today is similar to his last public call in April, which was issued in Beijing. He said then that prices may decline to less than RM3,000 as output in Southeast Asia expanded, before rallying in the final quarter. "I expect palm stocks on 1st December in Malaysia to be at a record high," Mistry said in Sydney today, according to the remarks. Reserves in the second-largest producer reached an all- time high of 2.27 million tons in November 2008 and stood at 2.05 million tons last month, according to Bloomberg data. Global palm oil output will expand at least 6 million tons from last year as Papua New Guinea, Thailand, India and Colombia also see growth, he said. "We have a strong recovery in tree output, plus a strong increase in mature area," Mistry said. Record Production Mistry's forecasts for production in Malaysia and Indonesia are higher than official projections. Malaysian output may be 17.6 million tons in 2011, compared with 17 million in 2010, Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Bernard Dompok said in March. Dompok's outlook would match output in 2009 and compare with 2008's record 17.7 million tons, official data show. Indonesia expects output to rise 5.3 per cent to 24.4 million tons in 2011, Gamal Nasir, director general for estate crops at the agriculture ministry, said in December. Production in Indonesia will rise 8.1 percent to 24 million tons in 2011, Hamburg-based researcher Oil World said in a July 19 report. Global biodiesel demand is expected to grow 3 million tons this year, while demand for food will expand 3.5 million tons driven by rising populations and better living standards in developing countries, according to Mistry. Palm oil competes with soybean oil for use in foods and fuels. Soybean oil will remain "steady" at US$1,250 a ton free-on- board for the next few months due to biodiesel mandates in Brazil and Argentina, Mistry said. Still, the erosion in export demand for soybean oil from so-called price-sensitive countries will continue given its large premium over palm oil, he said. Large stockpiles of soybeans in 2011 from better-than- expected crops in Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay may lead to an increase of almost 12 million tons in the crushing of the oilseed compared with last year, Mistry said. That would help to produce 2 million tons more soybean oil in 2011, he said. "Soya-oil prices will only rally around December-January as we approach the end of the South American crush season," Mistry said. "The soya oil premium over palm oil will narrow as a first step before we see any gains in soya oil." -- Bloomberg |
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