Palm Oil Under Pressure to Begin 2026 Trading
Malaysian palm oil futures slipped around 1% to around MYR 4,000 per tonne on Friday, the first trading day of 2026, pressured by weaker exports at year-end. Cargo surveyors noted December shipments fell 5.2%–5.8% from November, reinforcing demand concerns. Also, caution mounted ahead of December production data, after November output fell 5.3% mom to 1.94 million tonnes. Meantime, top grower Indonesia set its January crude palm oil reference price at USD 915.64 per tonne, down from USD 926.14, indicating softer pricing. Still, losses were capped by signs of recovering demand from India, the world’s largest palm oil buyer, as imports rose modestly in November with refiners capitalizing on lower prices. Malaysia continued to diversify export markets toward Africa and the Middle East amid EU trade challenges. In 2025, palm oil prices plunged by nearly 9%, after the prior year’s solid gains, dragged by weaker crude, weather disruptions, and tighter sustainability rules in major markets.
S&P 500 — US Large Cap Index
FTSE 100 — UK Blue Chips
Euro Stoxx 50 — Eurozone Leaders
DAX 40 — German Equities
CAC 40 — French Market Index
Nikkei 225 — Japan Benchmark
Hang Seng — Hong Kong Index
Shanghai Composite — China Mainland
ASX 200 — Australian Market
TSX Composite — Canada Index
Nifty 50 — India Large Cap
STI Index — Singapore Market
KOSPI — South Korea Index
Bovespa — Brazil Equities
JSE Top 40 — South Africa Index
IPC Index — Mexico Market


