By John Richardson CHINA’S polyethylene (PE) market is being temporarily weighed down by overstocking which is the result of the big surge in March imports. Many of the arrivals in March were of material booked late last year when oil and so PE prices were falling, drawing traders and Chinese buyers into major commitments. This […]
Asian Chemical Connections
No room for cynicism as China targets major plastic clean-up
By John Richardson THE CYNICS out there would have you believe that the global plastics rubbish crisis is a passing fad, something that will fade from public consciousness as another “trendy cause” captures the popular imagination. They also want you think that the concern over plastic rubbish is almost entirely a rich world luxury. When […]
A brand new ‘how to” guide for forecasting Chinese polyethylene demand
By John Richardson TIME and again over the last ten years the strength or weakness of Chinese chemicals and polymers demand has taken everyone by surprise. One method of analysis that does hold considerable value as a methodology for forecasting growth might be predictions of future credit flows for some chemicals. The big uptick in […]
China chemicals storage at bursting point indicates no big new economic stimulus
By John Richardson CHEMICALS markets are a great barometer for weather conditions in the wider economy because they are upstream of so many manufacturing industries. We should therefore take close notice of the above chart, from this excellent article by my ICIS colleague, Yvonne Shi. What the chart shows is that by mid-March, weekly inventory […]
Growth in China second hand car market driven by ageing population
By John Richardson CHINA will become a country of a billion plus Western-style middle class consumers is what many people have been telling us for many years. Its unstoppable economic rise involves hundreds of millions more Chinese rising out of poverty as the economic boom moves steadily westwards into its poorer regions, is the popular […]
China’s January credit surge: Case for one-off panic, no new global economic boom
By John Richardson CHINA’S HUGE January credit increase might be the start of a new round of major credit-fuelled economic stimulus, was the theory I put forward last week. This would lead to a rebound in global growth and a surge in worldwide chemicals demand as global growth is about these three things: China, China […]
China’s ageing population could cost 240 million tonnes of polymers demand
By John Richardson THERE was nothing miraculous about the “Chinese economic miracle”. What instead happened was a lucky coincidence of economic reforms and lots and lots of babies. The reforms were led by Deng Xiaoping who in 1978 decided to open up the Chinese economy. But the opening up would not have delivered significant benefits […]
China slowdown threatens a million tonnes of lost styrene demand
By John Richardson CHINA’S apparent demand (*see note below) for styrene in 2018 looks set to have increased by just 2.5% over the previous year. This would be the lowest percentage growth and the smallest addition of new demand in tonnes since 2012. This would compare with our earlier estimate of real demand growth of […]
Trade war fears return as US LLDPE becomes more exposed to China
By John Richardson THE ground has shifted under our feet once again. Just as it seemed as if the US and China would complete a trade deal by the 2 March deadline, the prospects of an agreement have suddenly diminished. This is the result of the Trump administration declining an offer from two Chinese vice-ministers […]
Internal combustion engines, car ownership to quickly head the way of horses and carts
By John Richardson THE PICTURE on the left shows the Easter Day Parade in New York in 1900. As you can see, the parade is almost entirely made up of horse-drawn vehicles, bar the red-circled auto. In that year there was a horse manure crisis in the world’s major cities with the attendant problems of […]