Malaysian palm oil futures firmed on Thursday along with crude oil and rival soybean oil, while also getting support from a recovery in exports for the first 10 days of June.
The Bursa Malaysia Derivatives' July crude palm oil contract rose 0.73% to 4,531 Malaysian ringgit ($1,113.30) per metric ton. The August contract was up 0.82% to 4,575 ringgit/mt.
Cargo surveyors reportedly estimated Malaysian shipments for the period June 1-10 to have rebounded between 3.5% and 4.9% from a month earlier. In May, exports softened 14.5% versus April levels to 1.1 million metric tons, according to Malaysian Palm Oil Board data.
Prices also rose as escalating tensions in the Middle East buoyed crude oil prices due to heightening supply concerns, directionally improving biofuel viability.
However, gains were capped as stocks remained high at 1.28 mmt last month, up from April's 1.26 mmt and the previous year's 1.10 mmt.
Elevated inventory levels, nonetheless, support Malaysia's higher biodiesel blend mandate of 15% introduced this month.
The enhanced biofuel policy, which is up versus the previous 10%, is unlikely to significantly affect the country's exportable supplies, according to analysts.
Malaysia produces around 20 mmt of palm oil annually and uses only 3 mmt in the local market, leaving around 17 mmt of palm oil supply, either for export or higher domestic use, CGTN News reported, citing Malaysian Biodiesel Association president Tee Lip Teng.
In Indonesia, shipments in the near term may rise as exporters rush to sell cargoes prior to the full implementation of the new single-gate export policy next year.
This could intensify competition with Malaysian exports, as Indian and Chinese buyers turn to Indonesia for cheaper supplies, Business Today reported.
In China, favorable import margins are prompting buyers to secure palm oil cargoes despite domestic inventories remaining at three-year highs, price reporting agency MySteel said.