Here is a first of a series of outlook articles for 2020 where I focus on the risks ahead for the global polyethylene business By John Richardson CHINA’S polyethylene (PE) market will start 2020 with a whimper because of exceptionally high levels of overstocking, which is a reflection of growing global oversupply. In the […]
Asian Chemical Connections
Long term downcycle will transform global petrochemicals, creating new Winners and Losers
By John Richardson THIS IS not a normal downcycle. Please get over that idea however many people, both inside and outside your company, tell you this. It is very tempting to believe that this is a normal bit of bloodletting that comes along ever so often. The temptation comes from the fact that it is […]
Asian copolymer polyproplyene used as a sink for growing oversupply of ethylene
By John Richardson A SURE sign that the Asian ethylene-to-polyethylene (PE) markets are distressed comes from the above chart on the left which shows declines in block copolymer polypropylene (PP) premiums over homo-polymer raffia-grade PP since June of this year. In October in Southeast Asia (SEA), the price for the normally higher value block copolymer […]
Asian polyethylene shutdowns? Once again, good luck with that idea
By John Richardson I was new to the game as I had only been analysing the petrochemicals business for 12 months. Hence, when a US industry executive told me that South Korean cracker-to-polyethylene (PE) plants would shut down, during the Asian Financial Crisis, I almost believed him. This was until I made my first visit […]
Europe to become much more self-sufficient in polyethylene because of sustainability
Yes, I know I promised to focus on Asia and its cracker-to-PE industry today and how the region will not see shutdowns that will make way for the big increase in US production. This will still be a theme of a later post. But it occurred to me, after my post on Sunday, that I […]
Environmental taxes on US polyethylene shipments to the EU seem inevitable
By John Richardson IT ALL seemed to make perfect sense at the time. Feedstock and financing were incredibly cheap and trade barriers kept falling. Although there were some faint and distant public rumblings about plastic rubbish, most of the public and the majority of legislators were not bothered about the issue. The global economy was […]
The global polyethylene paradigm shift of permanently weaker demand
By John Richardson MALCOLM GLADWELL, in his very thought provoking book The Outliers, writes about what we think is gut instinct, but is instead the result of a minimum of 10,000 hours of doing something: Sub-conscious expertise that tells us how to think and react in most situations because we’ve been here before. So, when […]
Plastics rubbish and the developing world: Lost petrochemicals demand and the new service-led approach
By John Richardson IT WAS billed as a liberating product, something that brought a little luxury to the lives of the very poor. That’s how the single-serve pouch was marketed. But nobody thought enough about the environmental impact of selling single measures of say shampoo in these pouches to people in countries such as India […]
The new China and the rise of the Millennials transform the petrochemicals business model
By John Richardson ANYONE who has anything to do with the petrochemicals industry or anything to do with the global economy, in other words all of us, needs to pay close attention to the above chart and what it is telling us. This once again demonstrates the enormous value of the ICIS Supply & Demand […]
If Strait of Hormuz closed down: Effect on petrochemicals exports
By John Richardson NEITHER SIDE seems to want a war but at febrile times like this miscalculations could see the US and Iran in a full-scale conflict. Iran might feel it has little more to lose. Its economy is suffering so badly from increased sanctions, especially as a result of the collapse in its oil […]