Singapore, Jan 30, 2026, 15:22 SGT — Regular session
- Wilmar (SGX:F34) slipped 1.45% in afternoon trading, retreating from its highs earlier this week.
- Palm oil futures dipped as traders booked profits, following declines seen in competing edible oils.
- Investors are sorting through Wilmar’s involvement as a cornerstone backer in a Hong Kong IPO.
Wilmar International Ltd (F34.SI) shares dropped 1.45% to S$3.39 by 3:18 p.m. in Singapore on Friday. The slide came as vegetable-oil prices eased and traders reduced exposure ahead of the weekend. (SG Investors)
This move is significant because Wilmar operates across the entire edible-oils chain — from buying crops to crushing, refining, and selling into food and industrial sectors. When palm oil prices shift, the stock tends to follow, regardless of internal company changes.
Deal news hit screens as China’s top pig breeder, Muyuan Foods, announced Wilmar and Thailand’s Charoen Pokphand Foods would act as cornerstone investors in its Hong Kong share sale. Together, they plan to snap up around $685 million in stock—almost half the deal. In Hong Kong listings, cornerstone investors agree upfront to purchase shares at the offer price, giving issuers a clearer sense of demand before bookbuilding ends. (Reuters)
Malaysian palm oil futures dropped on Friday, tracking declines in Chicago soyoil and China’s Dalian oils. The benchmark April contract on Bursa Malaysia’s derivatives exchange fell 1.81% to 4,239 ringgit per metric ton in early trading. Despite the dip, it was set to post a weekly gain, according to a Reuters report. (Business Recorder)
The day before, palm oil gained ground, buoyed by firmer rival oils and hopes for tighter supplies. David Ng, a trader at Kuala Lumpur-based Iceberg X, credited “stronger soybean oil” for pushing prices up and noted expectations of inventory drawdowns. He identified support around 4,150 ringgit per ton, with resistance near 4,300. Meanwhile, export estimates for Jan. 1-25 climbed compared to the previous month, according to the Malaysian Palm Oil Board. (Prestasi Sawit Malaysia)
Wilmar knows this tug-of-war well. While weaker palm oil prices can lower costs for some downstream units, they risk tightening trading and refining margins if competing oils drop more sharply and spreads shrink.
Investors are wary, though. A steeper drop in palm oil or sudden shifts in currencies and rival oils could quickly sour sentiment — and the IPO commitment will linger as pricing nears.
Wilmar, a major player in Asia’s agribusiness sector, operates in oilseed crushing, edible oils, and consumer foods across over 20 countries, the company says. That diversity can help steady earnings, though it also means the stock faces a wider range of risks compared to a pure-play producer. (Wilmar International)
Wilmar’s full-year results are the next major event to watch. The company will unveil its financial statements for the year ending Dec. 31, 2025, after the market closes on Feb. 26. (SGX Links)