Instead, farmers were reluctant to sell this year's bumper oilseed output at low prices and stocks will be carried forward to be crushed next year, said managing director of trading firm G.G. Patel & Nikhil Research Company, Govindbhai Patel. Lower purchases by the world's biggest importer of vegetable oils could put pressure next year on soyoil and palm oil prices, which have surged over the last few months.
India is expected to import 15.13 million tonnes of edible oils in the year starting on November 1, down 70,000 tonnes from the current year, Patel told an industry conference on Wednesday. India's edible oil purchases - mainly palm oil from Malaysia and Indonesia and soybean oil from Argentina and Brazil - have increased each year since 2010/11, according to the Mumbai-based Solvent Extractors Association of India (SEA).
The country's edible oil imports in the year to October 31 are now expected to rise 4.3 percent from a year ago to 15.2 million tonnes, Patel said, after earlier being expected to fall. That means India is likely to start the new marketing year with carry forward stocks of 1.16 million tonnes of soybeans compared to just 460,000 tonnes a year ago, Patel said.
Copyright Reuters, 2017