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Crude Oil05-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Saudi Aramco’s net income in
the second quarter fell by 22% year on year to
Saudi riyal (SR) 85 billion ($22.7 billion),
weighed down by a combination of lower sales
and higher operating costs.
in SR billions
Q2 2025
Q2 2024
% Change
H1 2025
H1 2024
% Change
Sales
407.14
470.61
-13.5
784.48
827.75
-5.23
Operating profit
167.09
206.45
-19.1
358.45
408.50
-12.3
Net Profit
85.02
109.01
-22.0
182.57
211.28
-13.6
Its total revenue in the first six months of
2025 fell by 5% year on year on lower crude oil
and chemical prices, partially offset by higher
volumes sold, the Saudi oil and refining major
said in a filing on the Saudi bourse on
Tuesday.
Aramco’s adjusted net income for the first half
of 2025 was SR190.8 billion, with total
adjusting items of SR8.2 billion, primarily
consisting of impairments and write-downs,
losses on sales, retirements and disposals, and
adjustments related to joint ventures and
associates, the company said.
Aramco’s average realized crude oil prices in
Q2 2025 stood at $66.7/bbl, down from $85.7/bbl
in the same period last year.
“Despite geopolitical headwinds, we continued
to supply energy with exceptional reliability
to our customers, both domestically and around
the world, said Aramco president & CEO Amin
Nasser in a statement.
“Market fundamentals remain strong, and we
anticipate oil demand in the second half of
2025 to be more than two million barrels per
day higher than the first half,” Nasser added.
“Our long-term strategy is consistent with our
belief that hydrocarbons will continue to play
a vital role in global energy and chemicals
markets, and we are ready to play our part in
meeting customer demand over the short and the
long term.”
Saudi Aramco’s Q2 capital expenditures of $2.81
billion supported “the steady and on-track
progress of capital projects” such as the
construction of the Shaheen S-Oil
refinery-integrated petrochemical steam
cracker, and other projects.
($1 = SR3.75)
Polyethylene05-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Click
here to see the latest blog post on Asian
Chemical Connections by John Richardson.
Let’s be honest: nobody knows the outcome of a
potential “Trump 2.0” trade war. The impact
could be anything from benign to a global
economic crisis on par with the Great
Depression.
But what we do know—what falls into Donald
Rumsfeld’s category of “known knowns”—is that
the global petrochemicals industry is facing
its deepest downturn on record. This is a
prolonged collapse in margins caused by a
massive oversupply of capacity, largely because
the consensus got China’s demand growth wrong.
So, what’s next? The easy conditions of the
1992-2021 Supercycle are over, and we are
entering a new, volatile era. We’ve summarised
what we believe are the five key trends shaping
the future of global petrochemicals:
Consolidation is
Inevitable:A major wave of
consolidation is coming. Smaller commodity
players without state support or competitive
feedstocks will struggle, forcing them to
move downstream into specialty chemicals and
composites.
AI as a Critical Tool: The
rise of AI is perfectly timed. It’s not just
for efficiency; AI will be a vital tool for
innovators to discover new composite
materials and build more efficient,
sustainable supply chains.
End of the Supercycle: The
old seasonal models no longer hold. Long-term
demand is being driven by complex forces:
geopolitical shifts, demographic divergence,
and climate change. The “unknown unknowns” of
a second trade war only add to this
uncertainty.
Climate Change Reshapes
Demand: We must prepare for climate
change to fundamentally alter consumption
patterns. AI can help us model everything
from mass migration and new housing needs to
the demand for sustainable urban
infrastructure.
Policy Will Define AI’s
Impact: The ultimate effect of AI on
petrochemicals consumption will hinge on
government policy. Will AI-driven abundance
alleviate poverty, or will job losses cause
new economic problems? The answers will shape
future demand.
This is a confusing and complex time, but by
accepting these realities, we can work together
towards solutions.
Editor’s note: This blog post is an opinion
piece. The views expressed are those of the
author, and do not necessarily represent those
of ICIS.
Ammonia04-Aug-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–US crops continued to mature
towards harvest with corn acreage having
reached 88% silking and soybean blooming at
85%, according to the latest crop progress
report from the US Department of Agriculture
(USDA).
The rate of corn silking is ahead of the 86%
achieved in 2024 but trails the five-year
average of 89%.
Corn at the dough stage is up to 42%, which is
behind the 44% rate from the 2024 season but is
above the five-year average of 40%.
In the first update on corn dented, the USDA
said there is 6% of the crop at this stage,
which is equal to the level from 2024 and the
five-year average of 6%.
Corn conditions are unchanged with 2% very
poor, 5% poor, 20% fair, 53% good and 20%
excellent.
Soybean blooming has climbed to 85%, which is
on par with the 85% level from the 2024 season
but is behind the five-year average of 86%.
There is 58% of the soybean crop setting pods,
which is ahead of the 2024 mark of 57% and
matches the five-year average of 58%.
For soybean conditions, the amount of very poor
increased to 2%, with the crop listed as poor
still at 5% and fair remaining at 24%.
The level of good decreased to 54% with the
crops deemed excellent unchanged at 15%.
Winter wheat harvest has reached 86% completed.

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Titanium Dioxide04-Aug-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–US-based pigment producer
Tronox became the latest company to lower its
dividend, joining Dow.
Tronox is lowering its dividend by 60%,
reducing capital expenditures to less than $330
million and lowering its full year guidance.
The following table compares the company’s
current guidance to the previous one it
announced in April. Figures are in millions of
dollars.
Current
Previous
Revenue
3,000-3,100
3,000-3,400
Adjusted EBITDA
410-460
525-625
Source: Tronox
Tronox shares have fallen by more than 40% in
the past five trading days.
The company is assuming that sales volumes and
prices of titanium dioxide (TiO2) and zircon
will fall. Tronox expects to partially offset
the declines by strategic sales of other
products and better production costs during the
second half of the year.
For the second quarter, company sales fell year
on year, and it swung to a net loss. Demand
fell for most of the company’s end markets.
Competition increased, and the coatings season
was weaker than anticipated.
Tronox said higher interest rates and
uncertainties about tariffs are weighing on
consumer spending.
DOW ALSO CUT
DIVIDENDEarlier in July,
Dow announced plans to cut its dividend in
half because the downturn in the chemical
industry is entering its third year, and it
will last longer than expected.
In November 2024,
Celanese announced plans to cut its
dividend by 95% after reporting Q3 2024
earnings well below guidance.
Crude Oil04-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Italy’s Enilive, a subsidiary
of Eni, and South Korea’s LG Chem have started
constructing a new hydrotreated vegetable oil
(HVO) and sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) plant
in Daesan, South Korea, the companies said on
Monday in a joint statement.
The 400,000 tonnes/year plant is scheduled for
completion in 2027 and will be built by LG-Eni
BioRefining, a
joint venture (JV) between Enilive and LG
Chem.
The HVO and SAF are made from hydrogenating
sustainable vegetable oils such as used cooking
oil (UCO) and other waste and residues through
Ecofining, a technology developed by
Italian refiner Eni in collaboration with
Honeywell UOP.
Target applications will include acrylonitrile
butadiene styrene (ABS) for electronics and
automobiles, ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) for
sporting goods, and super absorbent polymers
(SAP) for hygiene products, the companies said.
“LG Chem is transforming its portfolio to build
a low-carbon foundation that ensures both a
progressively more sustainable growth and
profitability,” Shin Hak-cheol, CEO of LG Chem,
said in a statement.
“The upcoming biorefining plant in Daesan will
contribute to reach our 2030 target to increase
our biorefining capacity to over 5 million
tonnes/year, with the potential to produce more
than 2 million tonnes/year of SAF,” said
Enilive’s CEO Stefano Ballista in a statement.
Enilive has operational biorefining plants in
Italy and the US, and
is building new plants in both Italy and
Malaysia.
Speciality Chemicals04-Aug-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Here are some of the top
stories from ICIS Europe for the week ended 1
August.
Europe BDO to remain in
the grip of low demand, uncertain supply
outlook
Players in Europe’s butanediol (BDO) market
have faced challenging conditions in nearly
every month for the past three years or so,
and the situation looks unlikely to change in
the second half of 2025.
Europe polymer sector
welcomes trade clarity, but US exports likely
to drop
European polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene
(PP) players are content to finally have a
deal agreed between the US and EU on trade,
but there is concern over some key missing
details.
Changing petrochemicals
landscape drives need for more consolidation
– OMV CEO
Pressure caused by global overcapacity plus
the impact of the tariff war in shifting
supply chains mean that more consolidation is
required to create strong, global chemical
industry leaders, according to the CEO of
Austria’s OMV.
Europe PP players face
testing H2 with ballooning output and limited
demand
2025 has seen polypropylene (PP) players in
Europe face a double complication –
stagnant-to-soft demand and rapidly expanding
supply. 2025 will go down as the largest
single-year increase in global production, in
an already oversupplied market.
Europe methanol faces
supply overhang amid flat H2 demand
Oversupply and flat demand are expected to
dominate the European methanol market
landscape for the second half (H2) of 2025.
EU
chems subdued on EU-US trade deal as tariffs
concern continues
Trading in European chemicals company shares
was subdued on Monday in the wake of the EU
agreeing a trade deal with the US, with trade
group VCI claiming the proposed tariffs are
too high for the sector.
Europe’s Group I base
oils face challenges in tight supply
climate
European Group I base oils supply is likely
to remain limited for the rest of the year
amid some structural issues with
availability, though dampened demand could
offset some of the impact.
Crude Oil04-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–South Korea’s petrochemical
shipments declined by 10.1% year on year in
July while semiconductors and automotive
exports surged, official data showed on 1
August.
Overall exports up by 5.9% year on year
amid semiconductor demand
Exports to China down, up for US &
other regions
July manufacturing PMI falls to 48.0 –
S&P Global
Petrochemical exports in July fell largely due
to declining international oil prices as well
as a global supply glut, South Korea’s Ministry
of Trade, Industry and Energy (MOTIE) said in a
statement.
The country’s overall exports rose by 5.9% year
on year to $60.8 billion in July – the largest
June value on record – while imports rose by
0.7% year on year to $54.2 billion.
The trade balance stood at a surplus of $6.6
billion.
Semiconductors hit a historic high for July, up
31.6% year on year to $14.7 billion, driven by
rising fixed prices and sustained global demand
for high-value memory products.
Meanwhile, July automobile exports grew 8.8%
year on year to $5.8 billion for the second
consecutive month, due to strong demand for
hybrid electric vehicles and internal
combustion engine vehicles.
There was an increase in exports to six out of
South Korea’s nine largest export markets,
including the US and the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), the MOTIE
said.
Exports to China decreased 3.0% year on year in
July amid declining petrochemical, general
machinery and wireless communication devices
shipments.
While US exports in July grew 1.4% year on
year, driven by semiconductor exports, exports
of tariffed goods such as steel and auto parts
continued to decline.
Steel tariffs are currently set at 50%, while
South Korea managed on 30 July to
reduce auto tariffs to 15% from 25%
previously.
MANUFACTURING EXTENDS
CONTRACTION
South Korea’s manufacturing purchasing
managers’ index (PMI) dropped in July to 48.0
from 48.7 in June, according to data released
by S&P Global on 1 August.
A number below 50 signifies contraction.
July marked the sixth consecutive month of
declines in production volumes.
“Production volumes decreased at a stronger
rate than that in June, and at a solid pace
overall,” said S&P Global.
Firms often cited domestic economic weakness,
particularly in the autos and construction
sectors while foreign demand continued to
decrease.
“Price pressures also intensified at the start
of the third quarter, with businesses recorded
the fastest rise in input prices in four
months,” said Usamah Bhatti, Economist at
S&P Global Market Intelligence.
“Firms often noted that higher raw material
prices and exchange rate fluctuations – both of
which were linked to tariff increases – added
to cost burdens during the month,” Bhatti
added.
US-KOREA TRADE DEAL AVOIDS WORST-CASE
SCENARIO
South Korea’s trade deal with the US managed to
lower tariffs to 15% from 25% previously,
although it failed to secure a decrease in
steel, aluminum and copper tariffs.
But the 15% rate will still impact on the
market as it is higher than the 10% rate during
the past few months.
The tariffs on South Korea became lower than or
equal to their major competitors, also
eliminating uncertainty, said Minister of
Trade, Industry and Energy, Kim Jung-kwan in a
statement on 1 August.
However, he warned that trade conditions facing
South Korean firms will be “different and
challenging” compared to the past.
Focus article by Jonathan
Yee
Gas04-Aug-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Here are the top stories
from ICIS News Asia and the Middle East for
the week ended 1 August.
OUTLOOK: Asia naphtha
hit by high supplies; China demand to stay
firm
By Li Peng Seng 28-Jul-25 09:18 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Asia’s naphtha market is expected to
receive more cargoes arriving from the west
and the Middle East in the next one to two
months, at a time when alternative feedstock
liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) is displacing
naphtha demand.
OUTLOOK: Asia chemical
freight hunkers down for US tariff
disruption
By Hwee Hwee Tan 28-Jul-25 12:49 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Cargo flows are increasing, lifting
freight rates for some trade lanes albeit
gains are still capped by macroeconomic
uncertainty spilling over from recent US
tariff moves.
INSIGHT: China
chemicals phase out plan aims to boost
competitive edge
By Jenny Yi, Amy Yu, Lina Xu and Jimmy Zhang
28-Jul-25 16:51 SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The market
was alerted by a notice on Conducting a
Survey and Assessment of Old Facilities in
the Petrochemical Industry which was
officially released in China on July 16,
2025, with Shandong and Hunan provinces
subsequently deploying similar measures.
Malaysia economy to
grow 4-4.8% in 2025 amid tariff uncertainty –
central bank
By Jonathan Yee 28-Jul-25 17:03 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Malaysia’s economy is projected to
grow by 4-4.8% in 2025 amid US tariff
uncertainties and geopolitical tensions, down
from a previous forecast of 4.5-5.5% made in
March, said Malaysia’s central bank.
OUTLOOK: Asia methanol
supply ample but demand concerns
remain
By Damini Dabholkar 29-Jul-25 09:48 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Methanol supply in Asia normalized in
early July, with the restart of plants in
Iran post-conflict, as well as some from
planned shutdowns in southeast Asia.
OUTLOOK: SE Asia PE
faces challenging times amid tariffs,
increasing supply
By Izham Ahmad 30-Jul-25 10:02 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–The southeast Asian polyethylene (PE)
market is expected to face a challenging
environment in the second half of 2025 as it
grapples with likelihood of new import
tariffs in the US and with additional
capacity expected to enter an already
oversupplied market.
OUTLOOK: Geopolitical
issues still weigh on Mideast PE, PP
demand
By Nadim Salamoun 30-Jul-25 14:30 DUBAI
(ICIS)–Sentiment in both the Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC) and East
Mediterranean (East Med) polypropylene (PP)
and polyethylene (PE) markets has yet to
fully recover from the recent Iran-Israel war
despite the ceasefire agreement in late June.
OUTLOOK: SE Asia
propylene market to see oversupply, weak PP
demand in H2
By Julia Tan 31-Jul-25 10:40 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Propylene (C3) markets in southeast
Asia are bracing for headwinds for the rest
of 2025, as intense downstream competition is
expected to weigh on affordability levels for
C3 feedstock.
Trump says 25% tariffs
to apply to India as negotiations
continue
By Priya Jestin 31-Jul-25 13:07 MUMBAI
(ICIS)–Trade negotiations are still ongoing
between the US and India, but US President
Donald Trump announced in a social media post
that 25% tariffs would apply to the south
Asian nation starting 1 August.
OUTLOOK: Asia SM
margins may hold; China eyes exports amid
temporary oversupply
By Luffy Wu 01-Aug-25 10:17 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Asia’s styrene monomer (SM)
production margins improved in H1 2025 and
could remain healthy throughout the year
given weakness in upstream benzene market.
Maleic Anhydride01-Aug-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Huntsman sees “no reason to
panic, nor to be overly optimistic” as it
enters Q3, CEO Peter Huntsman told analysts
during the US-based chemical producer’s Q2
earnings call on Friday.
Volatility from tariffs
US housing expected to improve
China may act on overcapacities
Dividend payments to continue
Supply chains were “pretty thin right now” as
companies keep inventories low on the
expectation that energy costs will be coming
down, Huntsman said.
“People are ordering just what they need for
the next 30 days or so,” he said.
“Right now, I am not seeing a pick-up [in
orders] that would give me a great deal of
optimism, conversely I am not seeing a big
drop-off that would give me pessimism,” he
said.
TARIFF UNCERTAINTIES
A big issue for Huntsman is the volatility
caused by the unpredictability of the tariff
policies, he said.
The company could live with crude oil at
$100/barrel, if that was the new normal, the
CEO said.
However, “what is very difficult is when you
have a market that goes from $100 to $30 to
$100” per barrel, “and you are dealing with
massive working capital changes, that’s not
enlightened trade policy”, he said.
Huntsman, for its part, was not moving much
product overseas and trade did not impact it,
“all that much”, he said.
Likewise, most of Huntsman’s raw materials are
supplied within the region where the company
produces, “and we don’t hear a lot of noise
from our raw material suppliers”, he said.
However, the situation is different for the
company’s customers.
Customers in auto, aerospace or construction
were much more exposed to tariffs and
trade, Huntsman said, adding, “The
further downstream you go, the greater
volatility there is”.
CAPITAL SPENDING AND
RESTRUCTURING
In the current environment, Huntsman will
“continue to be extremely prudent” about
spending capital beyond the requirements of
spending on safety, maintenance and
reliability, he said.
“We remain focused on our cost structure and
making sure that our business expenses are in
line with market conditions and our cash
generation,” he said.
The company will also keep reviewing its asset
portfolio as it cannot be, “sitting around,
waiting for things to get better”, the CEO
said.
Huntsman’s global restructuring programs are
expected to deliver approximately $100 million
of annualized run rate savings by the end of
2026.
The full program includes the closure of seven
sites, including three downstream polyurethane
(PU) facilities in Europe and the Middle East,
one plant in Canada, one site in the US, a
sales and administrative office in Germany, and
the closure of a maleic anhydride (MA) facility in Germany.
However, Huntsman has no plans to shut down its
methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI) plant
in Europe, the CEO said.
The company’s European MDI production was among
the most competitive in the region and would be
so for years to come, he said.
“If we get to the point where we can’t justify
the operations of our European [MDI] facility,
I think there will probably be other facilities
that come to that conclusion before we do,” he
said.
While competitors may consider plant closures,
it was hard and expensive to shut down a
chemical facility in Europe, where companies
and plants usually operate interdependently,
with one plant relying on the supplies of
another, he added.
Looking beyond Q3, the company expects an
improvement in demand from the construction end
market, and “perhaps some gradual change” as
China was moving to focus on its
overcapacities, he said.
CONSTRUCTION MARKETS
The current problems in the “incredibly anemic”
North American housing market were largely
around interest rates and affordability, “and I
believe that is something that will be
addressed, can be addressed,” Huntsman said.
A “meaningful change” in interest rates could
result in “quite a rapid recovery” in the North
American housing market and take Huntsman to
“normalized levels of MDI,” the CEO said.
Potential home buyers wanted to commit to what
is usually the largest purchase in their
lifetime, but the high interest rates and
uncertainties were holding them back, he said.
“I am very hopeful that those markets will
recover, and we will be in a much stronger
position next year,” he said.
Meanwhile, China was still suffering from the
“implosion” of housing values, affecting
consumer confidence there, he said.
However, longer-term China would recover as it
was a “very competitive place”, with a
well-educated workforce, he said.
In Q2, construction represented about 55% of
Huntsman’s global sales volumes and about 50%
of revenue.
By region, about 40% of total construction
revenue came from North American sales, mostly
into residential housing; 25-30% from Europe,
driven by commercial sales; and about 20% from
Asia, where the majority of sales went into
infrastructure and commercial markets.
MDI
While there was little market information on
it, Huntsman estimates that the global MDI
industry is operating at around 80-85% of
capacity, Huntsman said.
MDI utilization rates are influenced by the
unusual trade patterns amid the tariff
uncertainties, he said.
MDI that was coming from China to the US was
being scaled back, remained in China, or went
into other markets, he said.
There were even MDI exports from Europe to the
US, he said.
“For some reason, we have seen [MDI] imports
coming into the US, from Europe, of all places,
increase”, he said.
“I can’t imagine in my wildest dreams why
somebody would do that”, given the high cost of
European MDI and the US tariffs, he said,
adding: “It’s being done, that’s the market.”
China is Huntsman’s most profitable market for
MDI, and “our business in China is performing
quite well”, compared with North America and
Europe, he said.
“We run our plant in China at pretty high rates
because we have got good market demand there”
as that country’s automotive sector continues
to perform well, he noted.
OVERCAPACITY
While China’s government seems to be moving to
address the overcapacities in its
chemicals and other industries, it was not
likely to shut down MDI plants, Huntsman said.
China’s MDI plants had good technology and
scale, and they were vertically integrated, he
said.
Those plants were very competitive, compared
with older, sub-scale MDI plants in Europe that
were struggling with supply chain costs, he
said.
Huntsman, for its part, does not plan to build
a new MDI facility, even with the US tariff
protection, the CEO noted.
“I personally believe that there is more than
enough MDI in the world today,” he said.
DIVIDENDS
The company expects to maintain its quarterly dividend at
$0.25/share, despite recording a fourth
consecutive net loss in Q2 2025.
“For the time being, we feel comfortable where
we are”, with regard to dividend payments and
cash generation, Huntsman said.
However, if paying dividends turns out to be
“materially harmful” to Huntsman’s balance
sheet the company may cut or halt the dividend,
he indicated.
If construction markets should deteriorate
further next year or the global economy slips
into recession, Huntsman’s board would make
“appropriate decisions” about dividends, he
added.
In related news, Dow has cut
its dividend because of the downturn in the
chemical industry.
Q2 NET LOSS
Huntsman swung to a Q2 net loss amid weak
demand, especially in the construction market,
lower selling prices and volumes, as well as
$124 million in restructuring and plant closing
costs.
Year on year, sales and adjusted earnings
before interest, tax, depreciation and
amortization (EBITDA) fell in all of Huntsman’s
business segments; Polyurethanes; Performance
Products; and Advanced Materials.
The gross profit and gross profit margin fell
as sales fell at a faster rate than cost of
goods sold.
Three months ended 30 June:
(in million US$)
Q2 2025
Q2 2024
+/- %
Sales
1,458
1,574
-7.4%
Cost of goods sold
1,276
1,331
-4.1%
Gross profit
182
243
-25.1%
Total operating expenses
302
209
44.5%
Net income /(loss)
(158)
22
N/A
adjusted EBITDA
74
131
-43.5%
Please also visit:
US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy
Macroeconomics: Impact on
chemicals
Thumbnail image: Huntsman’s CEO and
president, Peter Huntsman
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