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Asian Chemical Connections

China Economic Optimism

By John Richardson ECONOMISTS think China’s growth has bottomed out, thanks to unexpectedly strong March bank lending. They also think that interest rates will stay low for a long time, even if rates cannot be cut because of the inflation problem.  New loans in March totalled Rmb1trn ($159bn), more than banking analysts had expected. This renewed […]

US Euphoria

By John Richardson THE shale gas advantage, along with the revival of the US economy, made for a euphoric atmosphere at last week’s International Petrochemicals Conference (IPC)* in San Antonio, Texas. China was only a blip on the corner of the radar screen because the talk was so domestic-focused. The only doubts expressed were over […]

Foxconn And Chemicals

By John Richardson THE recent investigation by the US-based Fair Labor Association into Foxconn is a further indication of how China is transforming its economic model. It was found that Foxconn breached several Chinese regulations, including a maximum working week of 49 hours. The company is China’s biggest private-sector employer and manufactures 40 percent of […]

China’s March Inflation

By John Richardson THE importance of reliable market intelligence on China was further emphasised on Monday with the release of the March inflation data. Last week a sales and marketing executive with a polyolefins producer told us: “”Although the overall inflation rate has fallen to 3.2 percent (the February number), this is very misleading as it […]

MEG’s Fading Star

  By John Richardson CHINA’S mono-ethylene (MEG) market was supposed to be very strong this year. But instead, to date we have seen persistently weak market conditions that few people, least of all the traders, seem to have anticipated. The traders appear to have been taken in by the hype and booked cargoes for delivery […]

Confidence And Petrochemicals

By John Richardson CONFIDENCE is a strange thing. It can be derived from solid reasons for optimism over the future or from temporary factors that can rapidly disappear. And what is the value of publicly-expressed confidence? Is it often politically motivated rather than being based on the genuine belief that the future holds tremendous promise? […]

Wen’s Last Reform Push

By John Richardson Wen Jiabao has been at it again. His extraordinarily strong comments on Tuesday follow those he made last month about the risks of a return to the economic chaos of the Cultural Revolution. On this latest occasion, he has taken aim at the state-owned banks. China’s premier, who is to relinquish power […]

Further China Evidence

By John Richardson FURTHER evidence of weakness in the Chinese economy has emerged via the polyolefins market. In an excellent Insight article, my ICIS colleagues Chow Bee Lin and Peh Soo Hwee say that China’s plastics processors are resisting additional price increases because their customers, the manufacturers of finished goods, are struggling. The combined retail […]

China And Inflation

By John Richardson MUCH excitement heralded the announcement that February inflation in China had fallen to a 20-month low of 3.2 percent – well within the government’s annualised target of 4 percent. This led to the belief that the government would boost bank lending, and maybe further low bank-reserve requirements and interest rates. No doubt this […]

A Tough Q2 For The US

  By John Richardson THE hard numbers, in the chart above, support anecdotal evidence we have been picking up for over a month of increased Asian polyethylene (PE) exports to Brazil and other Latin American countries. It also confirms reports that Middle East producers are raising shipments to the region. This includes one major player […]

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