By John Richardson WHEN people talk about supply it is very often because it is much easier to quantify than demand when, in fact, it is demand that’s the real problem. This is the case today in the global polyethylene (PE) market where the focus is on the big slug of new US supply hitting […]
Asian Chemical Connections
Drone attack shows lack of Iranian govt control over competing factions
The following opinions are the personal views of the author and do not express the views of ICIS Following our post earlier today on the alleged Iranian attacks on oil tankers in the Gulf our guest blogger, Chris Parry (CBE), has provided essential further analysis on the shooting down of a US drown by […]
Symptoms worsen for Dr Benzene and China economy as trade war accelerates
By John Richardson THE ABOVE chart is again telling us something very important about the real state of the Chinese economy. It shows Northeast Asian (NEA) benzene pricing spreads over naphtha feedstock costs, (NEA pricing is in effect a China price as of course China dominates the NEA region). Dr Benzene, as with Dr Copper, […]
China PE spreads at seven-year low indicates too many eggs in one basket
By John Richardson CHINA polyethylene (PE) spreads over naphtha feedstock costs are at a seven-year low and I believe that spreads will continue to decline to below their 2012 levels –a year which marked the last major industry profitability downturn (see the above chart). You might want to argue that this has to do with […]
Vietnam PE demand booms on trade war, but for how much longer?
By John Richardson GLOBAL manufacturing supply chains are adjusting to the US tariffs against China, accelerating a process that began a decade or so ago because of China’s ageing population versus more youthful populations elsewhere. Let’s use Vietnam as an example to first of all examine the longer term drift away from China. Since 2010, […]
China MEG spreads turn negative on 171% rise in US retail prices for Chinese clothing
By John Richardson THERE are a lot of theories out there about why the spreads between Chinese mono-ethylene glycols (MEG) prices and naphtha feedstock costs have fallen in April and May of this year (see the above chart). But as I shall explain in detail later on, the only explanations that entirely stand up are […]
China benzene spreads at ten-year low on misplaced trade deal hopes
By John Richardson THE ABOVE chart shows that in April the average spread between CFR Japan naphtha feedstock costs and CFR Northeast Asia (NEA) benzene prices was just $19/tonne, its lowest level since January 2009 during the Global Economic Crisis. AS with Doctor Copper, benzene is a major raw materials building block for many manufacturing […]
China PE demand boom will not stop further margin declines
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 […]
China’s economy is not recovering say petrochemicals markets
By John Richardson IF YOU only read the financial press and follow the stock markets you can be entirely forgiven for thinking that China’s economy has turned around as a result of huge injection of economic stimulus. But anyone whose job it is to follow petrochemicals markets should know that the jury is still out […]
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 […]