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Asian Chemical Connections

South Korea “Denial” Continues

  By John Richardson EARNINGS estimates for South Korean petrochemicals companies for the full-year 2012 remain around 30 percent above where they should be because “most financial analysts remain in denial“, said an industry source. A sign of how bad the times have become was that LG Chem’s Q2 results, which were released last week, […]

US Targets China VAT Rebates

                 Mitt Romney would declare China a currency manipulator                Source of picture: Wikimeda        By John Richardson China’s practice of providing value-added tax (VAT) rebates for importers of raw materials who then re-export finished goods is the subject of a new US Department of Commerce ruling. And a leading international trade lawyer […]

China Still Destocking

  By John Richardson A NEW report from HSBC supports our argument that China’s synthetic resin market has yet to bottom out. Big structural changes in China’s economy are an additional factor, in our view, to the slowdown in China not covered in the comments below. The bank highlights, of course, the weak business environment […]

Cotton In Uncharted Territory

    By John Richardson POLYESTER producers, and their raw-material suppliers, enjoyed a huge boost to their profitability between October 2008 and March 2011 when cotton prices increased by 468 percent from 40 cents/lb to $2.27/lb. This led to polyester being substituted for cotton, and helped inspire a big capacity build in purified terepthalic acid […]

Fibre Intermediates In Panic

By John Richardson A SENSE of panic has gripped the fibre intermediates chain as a result of falling crude oil prices, an industry observer told the blog. “Nobody knows where the bottom of the market will be, which, to me, feels a great deal like the crisis in late 2008,” he said, “Prices are in  […]

MEG Continues To Struggle

By John Richardson THE above chart is a further illustration of what we believe is the wrong consensus view over China. Q1 2012 mono-ethylene glycol (MEG) imports surged by 30% compared with the same period last year, as traders bet on a sharp rebound in China’s economy. They believed all the talk of more local […]

Consensus Misses The Point

 By John Richardson The consensus view on China remains that we have reached, or are near, the bottom of the decline in GDP (gross domestic product) growth. This was how yesterday’s release of the preliminary HSBC China Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index for April was interpreted. Although the index contracted for the sixth month in a […]

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 […]

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 […]

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