Chemicals and Market Impact

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Auto-Mania Driving Vehicle & Materials Prices Higher And Likely Creating A Bubble

May 6, 2021 1:42:25 PM / by Cooley May posted in Materials Inflation, Auto Industry

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The auto industry dynamic is fascinating not least because the US is sucking up new and used vehicles as fast they can – driving the price inflation that we see in the exhibit below – but because this is happening at a time when many Americans are looking at lower vehicle utilization going forward as at least some of the working population will embrace the work from home opportunities that have been introduced because of the Pandemic. It is an interesting exercise to do in any part of the country, but we suspect that if you walk around any US neighborhood today you will find vehicles parked on streets and in driveways that look like they have not been touched, or have been barely driven in months. The argument that the vehicle is a sunk cost holds water in many cases, but the annual cost of insurance and maintenance makes no sense for a vehicle that travels less than a thousand miles a year, especially with low-cost alternatives like Uber and Lyft. See today's daily report for more.
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Much Of The Current Materials Inflation Is Likely Not Cyclical

May 5, 2021 12:19:24 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Materials Inflation, Shipping Market

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The headlines that are of most interest to us this week are the ones that continue the narrative of very strong demand, as they continue to point to materials inflation. While the auto producers have some raw material price protection in their contracts, the very strong results for 1Q 2021 suggest that they are not having to compromise much on pricing, as the demand is there, interest rates are low and consumer spending power is higher because of a year of incrementally adding to savings.

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Surplus Ethylene In The US? What's Next?

May 4, 2021 1:45:11 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polyethylene, Ethylene

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The movement down in ethylene in the exhibit below is significant, as it begins to show the overhang that the US has with ethylene supply. The price has to fall further before ethylene is likely to find any interested spot buyers outside the US (note that the US exported significant volumes of ethylene from November through January). The more important question is whether the weaker ethylene price starts to undermine derivative prices, especially polyethylene. We believe that will happen either late this quarter or early next, but only when US polymer buyers are satisfied that they have adequate inventory to meet what has been surprisingly strong demand. For more on this see our daily report.

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2Q-2021 Likely To Be The Polymer Profits Peak, Weather Permitting

Apr 30, 2021 1:54:54 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polymers, Propylene, PVC, Polyethylene, Polypropylene, Ethylene, Styrene, PET, PTA, Acetic Acid, Polyurethane, Glycol

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We still believe that there is a good chance that 2Q 2021 is the peak for polymer profits in the US and Europe, but it very unclear how severe the downside could be, given the growth potential. Seasonal turnaround will keep markets more balanced in 2Q, and the major uncertainty beyond that will be weather in the US. A series of storms like last year could hold the market up through 3Q and into 4Q, but an absence of any weather events could expose US surpluses quite quickly, especially for ethylene and derivatives. The new builds in China have focused on ethylene and polyethylene (and some glycol), propylene and polypropylene, and PTA and PET, and this is where the potential weakness will emerge.  There has been some new styrene capacity and that is also a vulnerable segment in our view. PVC, acetic acid, and large parts of the polyurethane chains look much more balanced to us and we have more faith in the projections being made by companies like Celanese, Olin, and Orbia than we do the major polyethylene producers. See today's daily report for more details.

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Is This The Start Of the Breakdown?

Apr 29, 2021 1:35:48 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polyolefins, Ethylene

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While we see some residual strength in several markets, and note the Dow push for higher MDI pricing, the European ethylene price move lower may be a more important red flag. Rail-car data below shows that logistics are getting back to normal in the US. The upward momentum in US polyolefins spot pricing is losing steam and prices in China are weaker. Read more in our Thursday Daily Report
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Methanol: The Economics Of NOW Suggest New Capacity Is Likely Under Discussion

Apr 28, 2021 11:28:12 AM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Methanol

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This latest data point in the exhibit below highlights the May contract nomination from Methanex relative to the current spot price and compares it to the history of both and the implied contract premium. Based on a historic look at the contract premium, the May producer push for price hikes does not appear aggressive. For more coverage on methanol and multiple other relevant and timely topics see our daily report.

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Painting By Numbers; Some Numbers Are Better Than Others

Apr 27, 2021 12:26:09 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Paint Companies, Axalta, Sherwin-Williams

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Mixed fortunes for the Paint Companies likely in 2Q 2021 and possibly for the rest of the year. Sherwin Williams is providing conservative guidance (see slide below) based on concerns over raw materials, and Axalta may be underestimating the auto production cuts - read more in today's C-MACC Daily Report
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It's Not Just Basic Chemicals, Everything Is Looking Good (Focus on Air Liquide, and Celanese)

Apr 23, 2021 12:14:50 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Green Hydrogen, PET

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Earnings beats and guidance raises are likely going to be the prevalent theme of 1Q 2021, and after Dow yesterday we have Air Liquide and Celanese today. Economic activity has picked up meaningfully in those segments of the economy that are suffering supply chain problems and while some of this is likely inflated, and will calm down once we sufficient inventory in the chain, it is worth remembering that large segments of the global economy remain depressed and that there are many growth drivers potentially still to come this year.

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Dow; Impressive On All Fronts

Apr 22, 2021 12:03:05 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals

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The highlight of the day is the very strong results from Dow and the even more positive outlook. While we see risks to the supportive supply/demand balances for some products in the second half of the year, especially the 4th quarter, there is no denying that all of the lights on the road ahead currently look green and we certainly would not criticize Dow for the outlook, even if it must rank as one of the most positive that we have seen (see table below), maybe the most credible positive outlook from any company in our careers (we have seen plenty over the years that have been complete nonsense). Dow is very well placed with its products portfolio to exploit both the current shortages and the expected post-COVID growth and it is important to note that the 1Q results were delivered in a quarter where there were still many COVID-driven demand constraints. We would stick by the advice that we gave earlier in the week, which is to keep the capital powder dry – and Dow seems to be doing this – reducing liabilities and not committing to share buyback beyond preventing dilution.

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Strong Building Products Demand; Good For PVC

Apr 21, 2021 12:39:13 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, PVC

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Building products demand remains very strong in the US, but the elevated lumber and PVC prices which appear impressively correlated right now are partly a function of supply chain issues. The housing market remains robust, but the winter storm in the South did damage to plants rather than structures – as opposed to Hurricane Harvey, which had a huge impact on building products. Because the housing market is strong, we are likely seeing speculators accelerate refurbishments to move properties faster, while demand lasts (anecdotally, the speculative renovation pace has picked up dramatically in Houston, where the housing market has bounced back quickly). But supply constraints likely are more of the driver – a random trip to Lowes yesterday found many of the shelves very light or empty in the building materials sections. As the chart below shows, building and construction is more than 50% of PVC demand.

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