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Asian Chemical Connections

ICIS Launches Asia PP Price Forecasting

By John Richardson PERHAPS nobody should have been that surprised that China’s polypropylene (PP) market was weak in February and the first half of March. Here is why: · China saw its highest-ever monthly level of PP homo-polymer imports in January 2014 – 448, 000 tonnes, according to the New York-based trade data service, International […]

China’s Changing Polyethylene Demand

By John Richardson ONCE people in the developing world start buying food wrapped in plastic packaging, they rarely switch back to food wrapped in paper, executives in the polyolefins industry keep telling us. They thus talk about a “base load” of permanent new demand as urbanisation increases across Asia, which is often accompanied by higher […]

China Has No Reason To Increase Credit

By John Richardson A FEW hours ago, the blog was so distressed when we read the argument that a 13-month low for consumer-price inflation in February gave China justification to ease lending conditions that we spluttered coffee on to the hotel sofa where we were sitting. Sure, China might indeed “blink” again, which remains the […]

Europe’s Dinosaur Destiny

By John Richardson DINOSAURS became extinct, scientists think, because of an event beyond their control – either an asteroid colliding with the earth, volcanic activity, an ice age, disease or gradual climate change. With all due respect to the former inhabitants of our planet, they were not the brightest of species. Thus, even if they […]

China’s “Irrelevant” Target

By John Richardson WHEN is a target for GDP growth almost irrelevant? Perhaps this year in China, when if history is any guide, even if China genuinely hits its 7.5% growth target, chemicals demand growth could considerably undershoot this number. See the above chart for polyethylene (PE), and here is the explanation: In 2009, when China’s […]

China’s 2014 GDP Growth Target

By John Richardson THE blog is scratching its head this morning as it tries to work out how China can have it both ways. Yesterday, Li Keqiang, China’s Premier, announced that the country’s 2014 GDP growth target would be 7.5%, whilst he also pledged to press ahead with economic reforms. But how can economic reforms […]

The Future For China Auto Sales

By John Richardson The distance from end-use markets didn’t matter for chemicals and polymers producers during the 2008-2013 credit surge in China because, as we said yesterday, demand was so good that few people were willing to ask too many awkward questions. But now the questions need to be asked. One of the questions we […]

What Yuan Depreciation Means

By John Richardson THE truth is that nobody has ever entirely understood the nature of China’s chemicals and polymers demand. During the good times, at the height of China’s credit Ponzi scheme, if you were a sales manager, why ask too many questions? Sales were sales and if mono-ethylene glycol (MEG) ended up stuck in […]

China MEG Market Points To Risks Ahead

By John Richardson SOMETHING very disturbing is going on in China’s mono-ethylene glycol markets (MEG), which, we, think, reflects the following: Failure to read the economic tea leaves. A sharp contraction in credit growth threatens to leave 2014 GDP growth a lot lower than many chemicals companies have forecast. The possible use of MEG as […]

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