Singapore, Feb 4, 2026, 15:17 SGT — Regular session
- Wilmar shares climbed roughly 3% to S$3.47 in afternoon trading, bouncing back from yesterday’s decline
- After slipping for two days, Malaysia’s palm oil futures edged up as traders kept an eye on shifts in China’s vegetable oils market
- Wilmar will release its full-year results after the market closes on Feb. 26
Wilmar International shares rose 3.0% to S$3.47 on Wednesday, marking their strongest day in over a week amid renewed buying interest in commodity-linked stocks. (Investing)
This shift caught attention as investors scramble to factor in short-term vegetable oil swings for a company whose profits hinge on processing margins and trading climates. Singapore’s benchmark Straits Times Index nudged up roughly 0.2% during the session. (Trading Economics)
Wilmar operates in edible oils, oilseed crushing, and downstream processing. Traders keep an eye on the usual indicators for palm oil: export volumes, currency fluctuations, and the price difference compared to competing oils like soybean oil.
Malaysian palm oil futures for April delivery nudged higher by 0.12% to 4,220 ringgit a ton at midday. The uptick drew support from gains in China’s Dalian vegetable oil contracts, though a stronger ringgit and softer Chicago soybean oil limited the upside. Traders also flagged January export estimates and a surge in India’s palm oil imports last month as key near-term demand indicators. (Business Recorder)
Crude oil gained ground, adding complexity to the biofuel situation since palm oil serves as a feedstock for biodiesel. “Heightened tensions in the Middle East provided support to the oil market,” noted Satoru Yoshida, commodity analyst at Rakuten Securities. Brent hovered near $67.9 a barrel, with U.S. WTI around $63.8. (Reuters)
Wilmar shareholders know the drill: higher energy prices tend to support biofuel demand, yet a stronger currency can undercut export competitiveness and reshuffle buying across Asia. A sharp turn in Chinese futures or soybean oil prices can swiftly ripple through sentiment tied to palm oil.
That’s the optimistic scenario. On the flip side, the palm oil market could shift suddenly—triggered by a single data release or the next move in the currency.
Reuters technical analyst Wang Tao identified 4,201 ringgit a ton as a key support for palm oil. If that level breaks, prices could fall further, targeting the 4,115–4,158 range. Such a drop often pressures palm-linked stocks, even if local equities hold firm. (Business Recorder)
Wilmar announced it will release its full-year financial results for the period ending Dec. 31, 2025, after market close on Feb. 26. Investors now have a fixed date to see if Wednesday’s upbeat sentiment holds up against actual margins, volumes, and any remarks on demand in its key Asian markets. (SGX Links)
Traders will be eyeing next week’s palm oil conference headlines and daily export data to see if the strong January flows are sticking around — and if that momentum can push Wilmar through to results day.