Chemicals and Market Impact

In The Race Against Inflation Some Are Winning And Some Are Losing Badly

May 10, 2022 4:58:42 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Energy, Ammonia, natural gas, EBITDA, blue ammonia, Agriculture, clean fuels, IFF, Armstrong, financial markets

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The pricing effect is very evident in the IFF results and projections, highlighted below. The company projected higher revenue expectations for the year but no increase in EBITDA with that higher revenue. We expect this trend to continue through at least the next couple of quarters, even if energy prices do not rise any further, as we believe that there is still some energy-related pass-through to come in many sectors. As the ammonia chart below shows, inputs in the agriculture/food industry keep rising.

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Inflation Drivers Are Everywhere, But Especially In Energy

Dec 10, 2021 12:10:15 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Crude, LNG, Coal, Energy, Inflation, Chemical Industry, petrochemicals, hydrocarbons, natural gas, power, natural gas prices, energy transition, EIA, Emission abatement, petrochemicalindustry, clean fuels, natural gas production, oil production, low emissions fuel

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The theme of our Sunday report (to be found here) will be inflation this week and the signs that we are seeing across multiple industries which suggest it could be more problematic and worsen in 2022. One of the focuses is energy and how the pressures to be seen as good citizens is lowering investment in oil and natural gas production, while the world is not far enough advanced on energy transition to be able to substitute for the missing hydrocarbons. We would agree with many of the recent comments from some segments of congress, which is that the answer is not to curtail exports of LNG and crude, as by doing so we will starve the rest of the world of hydrocarbons and create worse shortages than Europe and China are seeing today. The better solution would be to support “clean” US production of the lowest emission fuels possible – especially for natural gas. As we have noted in prior research, with a global solutions hat on, the relatively low costs of natural gas F&D costs in the US, when combined with what we expect to be relatively low costs of emission abatement in the US, should drive more investment in the US, creating jobs and export income.

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