By John Richardson POLITICIANS, not just including the Populist variety, are talking a lot about reshoring or bringing back home manufacturing supply chains in response to the coronavirus pandemic. This is partly because China’s shutdown of its manufacturing capacity in February and early March made legislators wake up to the world’s heavy reliance on China […]
Asian Chemical Connections
Beware of the fragile nature of the oil and petrochemical price recovery
By John Richardson RECENT rises in oil and petrochemicals prices should not in my view be taken as a signal that the worst phase of the coronavirus crisis is over. Please, please be careful out there. The extent of the rebound in crude should be a cause for concern given the state of supply and […]
Further polyethylene rate cuts seem inevitable with no certainty on who will blink first
By John Richardson IT IS NOT just a razor-like focus on petrochemicals demand that will get you through the crisis. Also essential is an equally close focus on production in a world where all the old assumptions about winners and losers have been turned upside down. But, as with demand, monitoring and forecasting production has […]
What petrochemical companies must do to adapt to a smaller coronavirus economy
By John Richardson PETROCHEMICAL companies can adapt to the coronavirus New Normal by running their businesses to suit what The Economist describes as the 90% global economy. The lost 10% of economic activity will be the result of social distancing, lost incomes, lost wealth and changes in consumer behaviour, says the magazine. Maybe it will […]
Why Asia may win and the US lose in post-virus petchems investment world
As always, these are my personal views and don’t reflect the views of ICIS By John Richardson IT IS A polyethylene (PE) world turned upside down which, in my view, will remain upside down. With oil prices set to stay around $30/bbl over the long term, the US ethane advantage is in my opinion pretty […]
Post-coronavirus world: How China could end up in a stronger position
These are, always, my views only and not the views of ICIS Here is another of attempt at long-term crystal-ball gazing where I again try to imagine the petrochemicals landscape in the post-coronavirus 2025 world. My earlier post had looked at the rise of sustainability and affordability that could work in parallel with the emergence […]
Modest rebound in oil prices on output cut reflects unprecedented scale of demand loss
By John Richardson DON’T SAY I didn’t warn you. It has been clear since early April that no amount of production cutbacks could reverse the weakness in oil markets. And sure enough, despite the 10m barrel a day OPEC+ reduction in output agreed over the weekend – the biggest cutback in the history of the […]
After COVID-19: How US petrochemicals could become the laggard
The big oil, gas and petrochemicals companies have already started planning for how the world will look after we have conquered the virus. What follows is therefore one scenario for how the petrochemicals world might look. I hope it helps to stimulate and challenge your thinking. These are my personal views only and not the […]
China: temper your expectations of a H2 recovery for supply as well as demand reasons
By John Richardson CHINA IS gradually getting back to work, but only gradually because the government is trying to carefully calibrate the release of tens of millions of people from quarantine without triggering a second wave of infections. The way that China has tackled the disease has been nothing short of heroic. Small and medium-sized […]
Coronavirus: The new ten-point guide for the petrochemicals industry
By John Richardson EARLIER THIS month I provided you with a ten-point guide for the impact of coronavirus on the petrochemicals industry. There have been many, many changes since then. Here is the latest version: The number One priority is employees and their well-being. Their psychological and emotional as well as physical needs will be […]