Chemicals and Market Impact

Demand Strength Is Showing Through The Inflation Noise

Feb 9, 2022 12:36:45 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Paint Companies, manufacturing, construction material, specialty chemicals, construction, OEM, AkzoNobel, paint, ICL, bromine, paint prices

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Akzo Nobel is somewhat unusual among the more specialty chemical (in this case paint) producers, as the company has managed to raise prices fast enough to offset costs and produced strong positive results for 4Q 2021. Not having auto OEM exposure will have helped Akzo and the company is well-positioned to manage pricing through its stores in many cases. It is a relatively safe environment to push up paint prices as all of the competitors have the same cost pressure and need to do the same, and demand remains strong – consumers are buying paint.

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Construction Material Shortages Break Records

Jul 9, 2021 12:54:09 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polymers, Raw Materials, Supply Chain, freight, Base Chemicals, Basic Chemicals, construction material

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The German materials shortage chart below is certainly eye-catching. There is nothing even remotely close in 30 years of history. We see this as further confirmation that we should continue to expect high shipping rates and congested ports until surveys like this show significantly better results and it is also further supportive of inflation. While it is extremely difficult to forecast from here, we would use the pendulum or spring metaphor – the further you pull either in one direction, the further they swing or spring back. The current dislocation is so extreme that everyone in the chain is likely acting instinctively and working to find greater supply and greater supply security. At some point, both end-demand and demand to fill inventories will normalize – either back to trend or back to a higher trend, but the inventory build piece will end and we will either get a gradual retreat in the scary data – such as the spike in the chart below – or we will see an equally quick collapse, at which point pricing will likely take a hit down the chain, with basic chemicals particularly vulnerable because the world has been adding substantial new capacity over the last several years in the US and China. More investment may be needed to keep up with higher trend demand in many intermediate or end-products that consume base chemicals and this could keep pricing supported, but basic chemicals and polymers look especially vulnerable to a reversal in the supply chain build we have seen for the last 9 months. For more see today's daily report.

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