Chemicals and Market Impact

Chemical And Polymer Prices Are Moving Higher

Feb 25, 2022 1:59:11 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Commodities, Energy, Raw Materials, Inflation, Chemical Industry, intermediates, specialty chemicals, commodity producers, chemical producers, materials, shortages, intermediate chemicals, energy prices, European energy prices, polymer industry

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Fear of shortages is the one factor that is most supportive in terms of helping to push through pricing and the events in Europe and their associated impact on energy prices should be all the support that the chemical and polymer industry needs to push pricing through that will cover cost inflation. Buyers of raw materials and intermediate products will naturally look to buy a little more than they need in the near term, both to ensure that they get something ad to try to build a bigger inventory cushion. This will have the effect of pushing apparent demand higher, making the pricing initiatives easier. Few will push back on pricing if their primary concern is availability. Looking at the BASF results summarized in the chart below, demand is already very robust and this will lead to higher utilization rates and higher volumes for chemical producers as well as high pricing. The commodity producers are likely more interesting here as they can move prices much more quickly than the specialty companies who might see margins squeezed over the next couple of months. None of this is good for inflation. See more in today's daily report.

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European Energy Prices Likely Rise With Any Russia Conflict

Jan 25, 2022 1:48:37 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, LNG, Energy, natural gas, natural gas prices, energy inflation, energy prices, energy shortages, fuels, Russia, European energy prices, energy supply, power generators, price inflation, LPG, Industry cutbacks

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There are a couple of related topics in the charts below from today's daily report, as any conflict with Russia would almost inevitably impact European energy supply, raising prices for natural gas and pulling on as much LNG as possible. That said, we suspect that part of the recent run-up in prices has likely been to build a cushion of inventory, as much as that is possible with limited storage relative to demand.

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