« Polyethylene Price Recovery Built On House Of Cards | Main | Indian PP producers benefit from strong growth »

Polyethylene And Alice In Wonderland


 

alice_lg.jpgSource of picture: the-office.com

 

 

By John Richardson

A FURTHER illustration of the Alice in Wonderland world of financial investors versus the fundamentals of real demand was provided by the Dalian Commodity Exchange earlier this week.

"Some investment funds started snapping up linear low density PE (LLDPE) futures in anticipation of improvement in the Chinese property market and hence plastics demand," said Canfeng Zheng, an analyst with Shanghai Chaos Investment in this article on ICIS news.

This theory was spuriously based on a 37.2% increase in real-estate investments during the first seven months of this year, but that was then and this is now.

The Chinese government has taken firm measures to cool the sector down and so to extrapolate from these historic numbers the idea that the sector will continue to expand at previous rates seems bizarre in the extreme.

But, of course, our friends in the financial world only seek to convince enough people for long enough of something being true (these are the poor gullible suckers left as the losing counter-parties in deals) in order to make their money.

From a polyolefins industry perspective as we first pointed out last year on this blog, LLDPE in China has to a significant extent become just another financial instrument. There is also quite a lot of evidence to indicate that the Dalian futures contract serves as a barometer for physical polyolefin markets as a whole.

On at least two occasions, the LLDPE contract has mislead the real market, leading to an overbuilding of inventory - once in late November/early December 2009 and in March of this year.

On this occasion, though, a wide buy-sell gap and a fall in import volumes to a trickle - according to this other report from ICIS news - seems to indicate that the fundamentals are just too bearish for the Dalian to be exerting a baleful influence. As we wrote yesterday, the recovery in PE is built on a house of cards.

But as my fellow blogger Paul Hodges points out, the far bigger threat from our friends in the financial community comes in the form of the underlying commodity we all have to worry about, above probably anything else: Crude oil.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.icis.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/167653

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

About

This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on August 19, 2010 5:32 AM.

The previous post in this blog was Polyethylene Price Recovery Built On House Of Cards.

The next post in this blog is Indian PP producers benefit from strong growth .

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

Related Posts with Thumbnails