The US chemical rail volumes should be considered in the context of some of the slowing demand that has been indicated by companies downstream of chemicals, and we see this as further evidence for possible inventory build through the chain. Earlier in the year these builds would have been justified by supply chain issues that have plagued all segments of retail and manufacturing for close to two years, but today we should be at or above inventory comfort levels. We are calling for weakness in demand and some margin erosion in US chemicals and polymers in 2H 2022, before a strong rebound as early as 2024, but if buyers of polymers and chemicals and their customers look to reduce inventories more quickly, the landscape could change quickly. While this is possible, with the threat of higher energy prices very real, we would be surprised in anyone was interesting in dramatically lowering inventories today.
Runaway Trains Into Weaker Demand?
May 13, 2022 1:40:50 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polymers, Propylene, Ethylene, Styrene, Benzene, US Chemicals, natural gas, manufacturing, EDC, ethylene glycol, demand, US chemical rail, ethylbenzene
PVC: Some Signs Of Weakening Near Term, But Still Better Positioned Than Most Peer Polymers Long Term, In Our View
Jul 15, 2021 2:01:06 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, PVC, Ethylene, PVC price, chlorine, EDC
Regional PVC price movements are interesting as the World is trying to find balance. Incremental ethylene and chlorine economics in Asia pushed the local spot prices for EDC so low as to shut out US EDC exports – the net result has been more PVC production in the US and a decline in US spot prices. While it is likely that the Asia incremental pricing will improve as some sellers will be losing money and may need to cut back rates, the US will not enjoy a better export market without the acceptance of much lower netbacks, which will maintain negative pressure on domestic prices. That said, PVC is very levered to economic, construction, and housing investment in Asia and there is likely some pent-up COVID-related demand in the region – the oversupplied market may not last for long. We still see a better medium-term outlook for PVC than for other major polymers. There's more detail and coverage on today's daily report linked here.