TOKYO, June 14 (Reuters) - Benchmark Tokyo rubber futures on Wednesday jumped
more than five percent to their highest in nearly two weeks, backed by Thai
government's plan to help rubber farmers and stabilise falli ng
prices.
"News on Thailand 's plan
to shore up rubber prices was the first good news in a while and that helped
boost market sentiment," said Toshitaka
Tazawa , analyst, Fujitomi Co.
The Tokyo
Commodity Exchange (TOCOM) rubber
contract for November delivery finished up 10.2 yen, or 5.5 percent, at 195.5
yen ($1.77) per kg. Earlier in the session, it touched 196.5 yen, its highest
since June 2.
The most-active rubber contract on the Shanghai futures exchange for September
delivery also surged 360 yuan to finish at 12,900 yuan ($1,899) per tonne.
"But I do not know how long this bullish trend will
last as Thailand was supposed to sell remaining inventories by end-May, but it
didn't and changed its policy, instead," he said.
The front-month rubber contract on Singapore 's SICOM exchange for July delivery last traded
at 144.6 U.S. cents per kg, up 6.2 cents.
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