Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Malaysia to buy more Indian sugar to resolve palm oil spat: Sources

MALAYSIA'S top sugar refiner said it will increase purchases of the commodity from India, which according to two sources is part of efforts to placate New Delhi amid an ongoing spat over palm oil imports.

MSM Malaysia Holdings Berhad will buy 130,000 tonnes of raw sugar from India worth $49.20 million in the first quarter, the company told. It bought around 88,000 tonnes of raw sugar from India in 2019.


MSM is the sugar refining arm of the world's largest palm oil producer, FGV Holdings, which is an unit of Malaysian state-owned Federal Land Development Authority or Felda.

The company did not cite the palm oil dispute as a reason for the increase in purchases.

But the two sources, who are familiar with discussions between the company and the government on the purchase, said it was a bid to appease India, which has been urging Malaysia to reduce the trade deficit between the countries.

India, the world's largest edible oil buyer, this month effectively halted Malaysian palm oil imports apparently in retaliation to Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad's comments criticising New Delhi over its policy on Kashmir.

Malaysia has said it will look to other markets to sell more palm oil but that may not be easy as India has been the biggest buyer of Malaysian palm oil for the past five years, purchasing 4.4 million tonnes in 2019.

Malaysia's exports to India were worth $10.8 billion in the fiscal year that ended on March 31, while imports totalled $6.4bn.

Malaysia imported a total of 1.95 million tonnes of raw sugar in 2019, according to data from the International Sugar Organization on Refinitiv Eikon. It typically buys more from Brazil and Thailand than from India.

India is the world's biggest sugar producer but is struggling with a surplus. Its exports are expected to rise to a record 5 million tonnes for the 2019-20 season.

MSM said it was expecting the arrival of three shipments of raw sugar from India between January and February.

"This is very good move. It will help India in increasing sugar exports," Praful Vithalani, president of the All India Sugar Trade Association told about MSM's move to buy more from India.

Around 50,000 tonnes of raw sugar has already been contracted by Malaysia for January shipments, said a Mumbai-based dealer with a global trading firm.

(Reuters)

More For You

UK business confidence sinks to three-year low after November budget

UK firms report weaker confidence as tax and regulatory worries dominate end-2025 sentiment

Canva

UK business confidence sinks to three-year low after November budget

  • Business confidence slid to -11.1 in late 2025, the weakest since 2022
  • Tax worries hit a record 64 per cent of firms, survey shows
  • Exporters feel steadier, pointing to domestic pressures at home

British businesses ended 2025 in their most pessimistic mood in three years, with confidence slipping further after the November budget, according to a closely watched survey published on January 15.

The Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales said its business confidence index fell to -11.1 in the fourth quarter, down from -7.3 in the previous quarter and the lowest reading since the end of 2022. Confidence weakened steadily between September and December and dropped again after the budget delivered on November 26 by finance minister Rachel Reeves, the survey showed.

Keep ReadingShow less