SOYBEANS / PALMOIL
Live value-equivalence ratio between Soybeans and Palm Oil from public commodity-price data.
Delayed reference data, provided “as is”. Informational only — not investment advice.
SOYBEANS to PALMOIL — value-equivalence ratio
1 mt SOYBEANS = 0.37 mt PALMOIL (by market value)
| SOYBEANS (mt) | PALMOIL (mt) |
|---|---|
| 1 mt | 0.37 mt |
| 5 mt | 1.87 mt |
| 10 mt | 3.74 mt |
| 50 mt | 18.70 mt |
| 100 mt | 37.39 mt |
| 500 mt | 186.95 mt |
| 1,000 mt | 373.91 mt |
SOYBEANS/PALMOIL ratio — recent history
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the SOYBEANS to PALMOIL ratio?
It’s the value-equivalence ratio of their prices — how many units of Palm Oil (PALMOIL) equal one unit of Soybeans (SOYBEANS) by current market value. Relative-value ratios like this are tracked as spread metrics (e.g. the WTI/Brent spread, the gold/silver ratio, or the gasoline/crude “crack”).
Where does the SOYBEANS/PALMOIL data come from?
From public commodity-price data: U.S. EIA daily spot prices (energy) and IMF Primary Commodity Prices (monthly; metals, agriculture, natural gas) — both public-domain. Prices are fetched live and cached server-side to keep request volume polite.
Is this investment or trading advice?
No. This page is informational and educational only. The data is delayed and provided “as is” without warranty, and nothing here is a recommendation to buy, sell, or trade. Energy markets are volatile — consult a licensed professional before making financial decisions.
Can I use this for arbitrage?
The ratio history can support relative-value research, but genuine arbitrage requires real-time data, low-latency execution, and capital that this informational page does not provide. Treat it as a research aid, not an execution tool.
How often is the SOYBEANS/PALMOIL ratio updated?
Energy prices (EIA) are published once per U.S. business day; metals, agriculture, and natural-gas prices (IMF) are published monthly. There is no update on weekends or U.S. holidays, so the figure shown reflects the most recent published price.
Commodity price data: U.S. EIA (energy) and IMF Primary Commodity Prices (metals/ag/natgas), public domain. Provided “as is” without warranty. Informational only — not investment advice.