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Asian Chemical Connections

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 […]

China Markets And Commentators In Denial

By John Richardson SOME chemical market players remain in denial or have yet to grasp the real problem in China, as is the case with quite a few financial journalists. Here is why: A widely-held assumption is that we cannot read too much into the few sets of data that have been released so far […]

Prepare For More Fragmented, Protected Markets

By John Richardson Last week, the blog gave a presentation at the ICIS Asian Polyolefins Conference in Jakarta during which we highlighted the anxiety over the impact of increased low cost ethylene and derivatives exports from the US. But only 3.9 million tonnes of ethylene and derivatives are forecast by ICIS Consulting to be surplus […]

China Polyester “Too Big To Fail”

By John Richardson HAVE some companies in the polyester chain in China worked themselves into a position where they are “too big to fail?” And might capacity additions carry on, despite Beijing’s attempts to rein-in further additions to already oversupplied industrial sectors such as the polyester chain? These were some of the questions the blog […]

Global Petchem Markets Turn Bearish

By John Richardson EXCESSIVE inventory building down all the major petrochemical value chains is a global rather than just a Chinese problem, according to Paul Satchell – the UK-based chemicals analyst with global investment bank  Canaccord Genuity in his latest Volume Proxy research note. “The Volume Proxy continues to decline, with the index now in clear […]

The Purified Terephthalic Acid Sweet Spot

By John Richardson WHEN is a recovery a sustainable recovery? This a key question for chemicals companies as they prepare their budgets for 2014. What has happened this year in both polyethylene (PE) and the polyester chain has surprised some people. China’s polyester demand was higher than expected in July and August, leading to a […]

Irrationality And Staying Solvency

By John Richardson JOHN Maynard Keynes, the famous economist and speculator ,  once said “the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.” In other words, if you are a trader you can sit around for ages waiting for the fundamentals to drive any particular market, and, as a result, go bust – […]

China’s Polyester Industry And The New Big Picture

Source: ICIS supply and demand database   By John Richardson THE polyester chain in China is a good example of the dangers of assuming that the big macroeconomic picture will remain more or less unchanged. Large amounts of purified terepththalic acid (PTA) (see the above chart) and polyester capacity seems to have been added in […]

Adjusting Inventories To Lower China Growth

By John Richardson EXCESSIVE inventory building across a range of commodities in China, including  petrochemicals, continues to worry the blog. One reason, as we discussed yesterday, might be that traders are in the midst of a liquidity squeeze as a result of the late June credit crackdown. They have therefore taken out further very-aggressive positions […]

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