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Edible Oil Rush Saves Canola From Trade Distress in ‘Crazy Year’

Edible Oil Rush Saves Canola From Trade Distress in ‘Crazy Year’

(Bloomberg) -- The canola market in Canada, rattled by trade woes with China, is rebounding in tandem with a bullish jolt in global vegetable-oil demand.

Canola futures have rallied from September lows, and the market probably will be firm until at least the North American spring, Ken Ball, a senior commodity futures adviser at PI Financial in Winnipeg, Manitoba, said in a telephone interview. The veg-oil surge means canola “crushers are going strong and with margins like this, if they could be open 28 hours a day, they would be,” he said.

Edible-oil demand rose as soybean processing ebbed in China after the outbreak of African swine fever ravaged the hog herd, reducing the use of feed made from the oilseed. Palm-oil futures have surged, partly because of a trade spat between Malaysia, the second-biggest producer, and India, a leading buyer.

For canola and oilseeds, “world demand is still there,” Wayne Palmer, a senior market analyst at Exceed Grain Marketing in Winnipeg, said in a phone interview. “It’s been a crazy year: unprecedented moisture, the longest period of planting that the U.S. couldn’t get their crop in, reduced yields, a harvest from hell in Canada and in the U.S., and China not buying.”

Edible Oil Rush Saves Canola From Trade Distress in ‘Crazy Year’

Canola for March delivery has climbed more than 5% to C$477.10 ($363.50) a metric ton from a September low on ICE Futures U.S. The price could be C$50 higher absent the trade dispute with China, Palmer said.

READ: Canada Seeks WTO Bilateral Consultation in Canola Row With China

Canadian canola-oil output rose 8.4% in the four months ended November from a year earlier, government data showed, signaling higher demand. China is open to imports of the oil with no restrictions.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ashley Robinson in Winnipeg (Non BLP Loc) at arobinson193@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Attwood at jattwood3@bloomberg.net, Patrick McKiernan, Millie Munshi

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