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    VEGOILS-Palm hits 1-mth low on weak overseas markets; exports steady

    * Record soy crops spells trouble for palm in Q2 2013

    -trader

    * Eighteen percent drop in February's palm oil production

    -trader

    * Palm oil to rebound into 2,506-2,521 ringgit range

    -technicals

    (Updates prices, adds details)

    By Anuradha Raghu

    KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 26 (Reuters) - Malaysian palm oil futures

    slipped to a one-month low on Tuesday as weak overseas vegetable

    oil markets kept investors on edge, although upbeat export data

    helped limit losses.

    China and U.S. soy markets, which are tracked by palm,

    remained weak after suffering steep falls on Monday and as

    better weather in the U.S. Midwest and South America improved

    the prospects for supply.

    Stronger-than-expected exports in the first 25 days of

    February, buoyed by increased shipments of Malaysian palm oil

    products to Europe and India, kept prices from tumbling further.

    "The cash trade was limited on light-to-moderate demand in

    all regions today, but the futures market drew some support from

    the 25 days Feb export report," said a trader with a local

    commodities brokerage in Malaysia.

    The USDA outlook numbers, with projections of a record

    soybean crop at 3.4 billion bushels, are bearish, he added.

    "This certainly spells trouble for palm oil in the second

    quarter of 2013."

    By the midday break, the benchmark May contract on

    the Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Exchange had inched down 0.8

    percent to 2,451 ringgit ($790) per tonne. Prices earlier fell

    to 2,448 ringgit, the lowest since Jan. 29.

    Total traded volume stood at 12,705 lots of 25 tonnes each,

    slightly higher than the usual 12,500 lots.

    Technicals showed Malaysian palm oil is expected to rebound

    into a range of 2,506-2,521 ringgit per tonne, as a correction

    from the Feb. 20 high of 2,584 ringgit could have temporarily

    completed, said Reuters market analyst Wang Tao.

    Investors are pinning hopes on healthy exports alongside

    seasonally slowing production to ease the current 2.58 million

    tonne stockpile in Malaysia, the world's No.2 producer.

    "At the end of the month we might see an 18 percent drop in

    production. And with this kind of exports, we will definitely

    see a drawdown in the stocks," said a trader who deals with a

    foreign commodities brokerage.

    Brent crude futures fell by more than a dollar to one-month

    lows below $114 a barrel on Tuesday, hit by worries over demand

    growth as a potential political vacuum in Italy revived fears

    over instability in the debt-plagued euro zone.

    In competing vegetable oil markets, the U.S. soyoil for May

    delivery fell 1 percent in early Asian trade. The

    most-active September soybean oil contract on the

    Dalian Commodity Exchange inched down 0.6 percent.

    Palm, soy and crude oil prices at 0520 GMT

    Contract Month Last Change Low High Volume

    MY PALM OIL MAR3 2401 -18.00 2400 2422 212

    MY PALM OIL APR3 2431 -18.00 2429 2452 1197

    MY PALM OIL MAY3 2451 -19.00 2448 2474 6754

    CHINA PALM OLEIN SEP3 6786 -26.00 6768 6828 409978

    CHINA SOYOIL SEP3 8390 -52.00 8378 8448 402654

    CBOT SOY OIL MAY3 49.91 -0.53 49.91 50.50 4882

    NYMEX CRUDE APR3 92.46 -0.65 91.92 92.65 8617

    Palm oil prices in Malaysian ringgit per tonne

    CBOT soy oil in U.S. cents per pound

    Dalian soy oil and RBD palm olein in Chinese yuan per tonne

    Crude in U.S. dollars per barrel

    ($1= 3.104 ringgit)

    (Editing by Tom Hogue)