Overview Palm oil is a vegetable oil extracted from the mesocarp of the oil palm fruit, while palm kernel oil is produced from the seed and has a different fatty acid profile and set of end uses. On commodity markets, palm oil is typically quoted as crude palm oil, with Malaysian crude palm oil, CIF Rotterdam often used as a reference benchmark for international trade. Prices are commonly expressed in US dollars per metric ton. Palm oil is used widely in food manufacturing, cooking oils, margarine, confectionery fats, bakery shortenings, and processed foods because it is semi-solid at room temperature and has a stable oxidative profile. It is also used in oleochemicals, soaps, detergents, cosmetics, and some industrial applications. The oil’s physical properties make it a key ingredient where texture, shelf life, and cost matter. Palm kernel oil, by contrast, is more similar to lauric oils such as coconut oil and is used in specialty fats and surfactants. Supply Drivers Palm oil supply is shaped by perennial tropical agriculture, with production concentrated in Southeast Asia and, to a lesser extent, parts of Africa and Latin America. The oil palm thrives in humid equatorial climates with abundant rainfall and limited temperature variation, so supply depends heavily on land availability, plantation management, and transport links from inland estates to mills and export ports. Output is constrained by the crop’s biological cycle: oil palms take several years to mature, and yields depend on tree age, replanting schedules, and agronomic practices. Because fruit bunches must be processed quickly after harvest, milling capacity and road access are important bottlenecks. Weather patterns such as drought, excess rainfall, and flooding affect fruit formation, harvesting, and extraction rates. Pest and disease pressure can also reduce yields, while labor availability matters because harvesting is manual and frequent. Expansion is limited by land-use competition, environmental regulation, and the need for capital-intensive plantation development. Palm kernel oil supply follows the same fruit cycle but depends on kernel crushing capacity and the balance between palm oil and kernel output from the same bunches. Demand Drivers Demand for palm oil is driven by food processing, household cooking, and industrial uses that value its functional properties and relatively low cost. In food applications, it provides firmness, stability, and a neutral flavor profile, making it useful in frying oils, margarine, bakery fats, instant noodles, and confectionery fillings. It also competes with soybean oil, rapeseed oil, sunflower oil, and animal fats, with substitution shaped by relative prices, product formulation, and local dietary preferences. In industrial markets, palm oil and its derivatives are important feedstocks for soaps, detergents, surfactants, lubricants, and oleochemicals. Demand is influenced by population growth, urbanization, and the expansion of processed food consumption, especially in emerging economies where packaged foods and edible oil use rise with income. Seasonal patterns matter because food manufacturing and festive consumption can alter short-term buying. Regulatory and labeling requirements, including sustainability standards and trans-fat reformulation, also affect product choice, though the underlying demand mechanism remains the same: palm oil is a versatile, functional, and cost-sensitive input. Palm kernel oil serves different niches, especially in lauric-based specialty fats and cleaning products. Macro and Financial Drivers Palm oil prices are influenced by the US dollar because the commodity is traded internationally in dollars, so exchange-rate movements affect local-currency costs and import demand. Freight rates, financing costs, and inventory holding costs matter because palm oil is storable and traded through physical supply chains. When nearby supply is tight relative to demand, prompt prices can strengthen versus deferred prices; when inventories are ample, the market can move into contango as storage becomes more attractive. Broader macro conditions also matter through food inflation, consumer purchasing power, and industrial output, which affect demand for edible oils and oleochemicals. Palm oil often moves in relation to other vegetable oils because traders and processors substitute among them based on relative prices and refining characteristics. It can also respond to energy markets when biodiesel demand links vegetable oil values to fuel economics. Related Commodities Soybean oil, rapeseed oil, and sunflower oil are the closest substitutes in food and biodiesel markets, so relative prices influence switching in both processing and consumption. Coconut oil is a related lauric oil and competes more directly with palm kernel oil than with crude palm oil. Animal fats such as tallow can also substitute in some industrial and biofuel applications, especially where formulation flexibility is high.