SB-Latex Producers Seek to Restore Margins
11 December 2000 00:00 [Source: ICB Americas]
By Robert Brown
With feedstock costs holding steady for the time being,
styrene-butadiene latex producers are hard at work restoring almost
non-existent margins by launching their fourth price increase in
just over a year. However, with crude oil prices still uncertain,
it is too soon to gauge how successful producers will be.
Producers launched their most recent increase on the heels of an
October 1 increase of 3 cents per dry pound, which saw almost
universal acceptance. The October 1 increase was "very successful,"
notes Robin McCann, marketing director of the paper business unit
at Omnova Solutions. Other SB-latex producers agree. "From Dow's
perspective, there wasn't a single exception to October's 3 cent
across-the-board increase," says Frank Cosmi, commercial director
of North and Latin America for Dow's emulsion polymers
business.
Spurred on by the success of the October increase, SB latex
producers have launched another 3 cent increase for paper and
paperboard customers only, effective January 1. The outlook for the
January increase is equally bright. "Expectations are pretty high
for the January increase," says Mr. Cosmi. "Paper latex prices have
a long way to go until they catch up with raw materials cost
increases." Omnova's Ms. McCann adds, "The customer acceptance of
the January announcement seems pretty good so far."
Earlier this year, latex producers had trouble raising prices,
especially on the paper side, which accounts for almost 800 million
pounds of annual latex demand out of a North American market of
roughly 1.5 billion pounds. The reasons for the pricing
difficulties on the paper side vary. One latex producer speculates
that pulp and paper producers did not project such a steep rise in
pricing in their 2000 budgets and were reluctant to take on
additional costs. "The worst thing you can do is spend a lot more
for raw materials than you had forecast," the producer notes.
On the carpet side, the second largest end use with roughly 500
million pounds of demand, latex producers had more success with
their pricing initiatives this year, but they started from a much
lower base, according to Mr. Cosmi. Following a major consolidation
in the US carpet industry in 1998, the three largest domestic
carpet producers account for two-thirds of industry latex usage.
Those companies used their buying power to drive down the price of
latex for the carpet industry. "Following consolidation, they had a
lot of leverage, and latex prices were devastated by early 1999,"
Mr. Cosmi notes.
"When monomer prices started to go up, latex prices in carpet
applications had nowhere to go but up," adds Mr. Cosmi. Since
styrene and butadiene costs began their ascent, prices for latex
for use in the carpet business have kept pace with those increases.
"That doesn't mean margins are good," notes Mr. Cosmi. "It just
means they could not get any worse."
This year, mergers and acquisitions have occurred in the paper
industry. Although the full impact of this M&A activity is yet
to be seen, such consolidation should have a similar result.
"If you look at today, the five largest consumers of latex in
paper consume 60 percent of all latex sold in the paper industry,"
notes Mr. Cosmi. "Now, you have five customers consuming 60 percent
of the product, and four companies competing for five customers'
business."
On the raw materials side, butadiene remains tight, with little
or no spot material available because of planned and unplanned
outages earlier this year. Butadiene operating rates continue to
rise, but because the industry is unable to reach reinvestment
economics, no new capacity is scheduled.
Styrene has come off and settled in the 26-to-27-cent range for
November. But since crude oil began its meteoric rise, raw material
costs have soared. Taking the average costs of the main components,
styrene and butadiene, in the fourth quarter of this year, and
benchmarking them against their low point in 1999, shows that raw
material costs are up 15 cents on a per-pound-of-latex basis,
according to Mr. Cosmi.
Despite the present pricing difficulties, Dow expects to triple
its emulsion polymers business, which has sales of nearly $1
billion, in the next 10 years. To do so, the company will emphasize
mergers and acquisitions, expansions and the introduction of new
products.
Dow's merger with Union Carbide will also give the company
Carbide's emulsion polymers business, which focuses mainly on the
paints and coatings market.
Dow is also building a 22,000-dry-metric-ton SB latex plant in
Zhangjiagang, China, which is scheduled to be on stream in the
spring of 2002. The plant will be the company's first in China and
its fifth in Asia. In addition, Dow is expanding its capacities
incrementally in Sweden, Italy, Brazil and North America.
CARBON BLACK--Degussa-Hüls AG is launching a
á1,500-per-metric-ton increase for its grade of extra
conductive carbon black, effective January 1.
EMULSIONS--The dispersions and paper chemicals business unit of
BASF Corporation will raise prices for its styrene-butadiene
emulsions by 3c. per dry pound and styrene-acrylic emulsions by 6c.
per dry pound for the North American paper coatings industry,
effective January 1 or as contracts allow.
EPOXY RESINS--Effective January 1 or as contracts allow,
Reichhold will increase the price of its Epotuf liquid, solid,
solution, blend, novolac and waterborne epoxy resins and epoxy
curing agents by 5c. to 7c. per pound.
The epoxy products and intermediates business of Dow Chemical is
also raising its epoxy resins and hardener products, effective
January 1. The off-list selling price for its solid solution epoxy
resins (600 series), solid epoxy resins (600 series), epoxy
hardeners, epoxy blends, epoxy glycol resins (700 series), DEN
epoxy novolac resins (300 and 400 series) and brominated resins
(530, 540 and 590 series) will increase by $110.20 per metric
ton.
FIBERS--KoSa is increasing the prices of its technical fiber
products by 5 to 22 percent, depending on market segment, effective
with orders on January 2. Included in the increase are the
company's technical filament and tirecord product lines. The
company says the increase is necessitated by raw materials cost
increases and general conditions in the global technical fibers
marketplace.
MELAMINE--Effective January 1, DSM Melamine Americas Inc., will
increase the price for melamine by 6c. per pound. The company says
global supply/demand remains the primary driver of melamine prices
over the long-term, but raw materials cost increases have now added
another dimension to the managing of its global melamine
business.
POLYURETHANES--Dow Plastics has launched a 10c. per pound
increase for its thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) resins in North
America. The company says the increase will be in effect for all
shipments of Pellethane TPU elastomers, Isoplast engineering TPU
elastomers, and Prevail engineering resins made on or after January
1.
The price increase is a direct result of the continued rising
costs of raw materials and feedstocks, according to Scott Moore,
North American product manager for engineering compounds at Dow
Plastics. "Prices for all key raw materials in TPU production are
escalating at rates that have exceeded producers ability to keep up
with price," says Mr. Moore. "With continued tight market
conditions for raw materials expected for 2001, this price increase
is needed to offset the rising manufacturing costs for TPU
products," he adds.
POLYVINYL ALCOHOL--Effective January 8 or as contracts permit,
Celanese Chemicals will increase its global selling price for
polyvinyl alcohol by 5c. per pound in the US and Canada and by $100
per metric ton in Europe, Latin America and Asia.
ICIS Copyright © Reed Business Information 2009
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