Asian rubber settled higher Monday on the back of gains in equities and a stronger dollar amid holiday-thinned trade, trade participants said.
Thailand's announcement last week that it was planning to raise the export tax for rubber to anywhere between THB5.0 and THB7.0 a kilogram from around THB1.40/kg continued to support prices.
Physical prices of Thai USS3 raw material were higher, at close to THB86/kg, due to strong demand from rubber factories. Total sales have been above 150 tons on most days for past week due to increased arrivals amid less rain.
TSR20 grade rubber on the Singapore Commodity Exchange again sold at a premium to RSS3 grade. Sicom's TSR20 is benchmarked against Indonesian rubber, which is commanding high prices due to tight supplies.
The benchmark June RSS3 contract on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange settled 0.2% higher at Y276.8/kg after reaching an intraday high of Y278.6.
"Liquidity is low because many investors are away for holidays," said a Japan-based broker with Okachi Corp.
Traders said rubber's correlation with gold prices, seen during early part of this month, wasn't evident anymore.
Prices failed to break above a 15-month high of Y278.9/kg set Friday. Most traders put immediate resistance at Y278.9/kg, then Y280 and support at Y277, then Y275.
In the absence of fundamental cues, rubber futures mainly tracked currency and equity markets, said a Singapore-based executive at a commodities brokerage. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average closed at its highest level in four months Monday.
The benchmark March contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange settled 0.4% higher at CNY23,545/ton even though inventories in warehouses recognised Futures Eby the Shanghai Exchange rose 8% during the week to Thursday, to 141,693 tons.
The benchmark July contract on the Agricultural Futures Exchange of Thailand settled 0.4% lower at an intraday low of THB96.10/kg.
Asian physical rubber prices were higher, tracking gains in futures markets, but many buyers kept to the sidelines.
"Sellers are keeping offers high as part of window dressing, hoping to convince buyers that current price levels are here to stay, once they return from holidays," said an exporter in Singapore.
He said cheaper rubber at bonded warehouses in Qingdao was also acting as a deterrent for buyers in China. Special-grade STR20 traded at $2,930/ton, free-on-board, for February shipment.
(Source: irco.biz)