Wednesday, June 11, 2014

El Nino Risk Dents IOI’s Palm Oil Supply Outlook

A worker carries palm fruit at a local palm plantation in Shah Alam outside Kuala Lumpur on November 21, 2013. Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology said on June 3, 2014 forecast that at least a 70 percent chance of an El Nino developing in 2014. (Reuters Photo/Samsul Said)
A moderate El Nino weather pattern would reduce palm oil output by as much as 12 percent in Malaysia, the world’s second-largest producer, IOI Corporation chief executive Lee Yeow Chor said.
Prices may advance to a range of 2,650 ringgit ($827) a metric ton to 2,850 ringgit from August if the event occurs, Lee said in an interview in Kuala Lumpur. Futures closed at an eight-month low of 2,385 ringgit yesterday. An El Nino pattern as severe as in 1997-1998 may cut production by as much as 15 percent, Lee said, without specifying a period for the decline.
Forecasters from the US to the United Nations have warned such an event may happen this year, and Goldman Sachs Group says disruptions associated with El Ninos have been most important for cocoa, coffee, sugar and palm oil. An El Nino pattern, which can roil agricultural markets worldwide as farmers contend with drought or too much rain, may be established by August, according to just over half of the climate models surveyed by Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology.
“The effect of the dry weather accompanying El Nino will not be so quick, it will stretch on for a period of time,” Lee said yesterday, referring to the impact on output. “The effect of the reduced production will also be seen in a delayed manner” on prices, he said.
There’s at least a 70 percent chance of an El Nino developing in 2014, Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology said on June 3. El Nino this year will probably be weak, according to Commodity Weather Group and AccuWeather.
Tropical regions
Oil palms thrive in tropical regions near the equator with rain ranging from 1,500 millimeters to 4,000 millimeters a year without dry periods of more than a month, according to Barclays. Studies show that less than 100 millimeters over two consecutive months can reduce output by 5 percent over the next three years, while droughts longer than six months cut production by 20 percent, analysts including Ephrem Ravi and Krishan Agarwal wrote in January.
“CPO should surge above 3,000 ringgit per ton if El Nino materializes,” Alan Lim, an analyst at Kenanga Investment Bank, wrote in a June 6 report, referring to crude palm oil.
A moderate El Nino may lead to output in Malaysia remaining flat at 19.2 million tons this year and declining 2.6 percent to 18.7 million tons in 2015, according to Ling Ah Hong, director of Ganling, a Malaysian plantation consulting company.
Higher inventories
The last moderate El Nino occurred in 2009-10, according to the Climate Prediction Centre. Malaysian output declined 3.4 percent to 17 million tons in 2010 from 17.6 million tons a year earlier, palm oil board data show.
While plantation owners are on guard for an adverse weather phenomenon later this year that may hurt production, output this quarter has increased, contributing to higher inventories. Palm oil futures have retreated from an 18-month high in March as production recovered from a seasonal drop in the first quarter.
In 1997-98, the strongest El Nino on record back to 1950 helped push the global mean temperature in 1998 up 1.2 degrees to what was then an all-time high of 15 degrees Celsius, according to the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The event in 2006-07 caused droughts in the Asia-Pacific region, more than halving Australia’s wheat output and hurting Indonesia’s coffee harvest.
Bloomberg

By Ranjeetha Pakiam & Chong Pooi Koon on 08:10 am Jun 11, 2014

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