Chemicals and Market Impact

Demand Growth Continues To Favor Strong Corporate Results

Feb 23, 2022 3:56:50 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polyolefins, PVC, Energy, Supply Chain, manufacturing, Westlake, Building Products, construction, housing, diversification, construction market, Element Solutions

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Westlake Chemical began today at a 52 week high on the back of very strong earnings but has retreated with the market. Westlake has been one of our favorite ideas since founding C-MACC in part because we believe in the diversification strategy into building products and in part because the PVC market has not seen the same level of overinvestment as polyolefins globally over the last 3 years. Westlake’s view of the housing and construction market aligns with ours and by breaking out this segment of the business Westlake should see some valuation benefit from the more stable earnings that this segment should provide. Note that the focused building products companies trade at significantly higher multiples than chemicals. We expect Westlake to get earnings and multiple boosts from here.

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Some Chemical Producer Price Initiatives Will Fare Better Than Others

Jan 11, 2022 3:10:34 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polyolefins, Polyethylene, Raw Materials, LyondellBasell, Chemical Industry, polyethylene producers, oversupply, Basic Chemicals, Westlake, chemical producers, Huntsman, Building Products, price initiatives, demand strength, Sika, monomer prices

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We are seeing pockets of real demand strength in some areas of chemicals, such as building products, and this is allowing producers to push through price increases to reflect higher costs and most likely add some margin. In other areas where the fundamentals might not be quite as supportive, we are still seeing attempts to pass on higher costs. Sika has supported what we have heard from many over the last few weeks, which is that the building products chain remains tight, as demand is strong, capacity is running hard and logistic issues continue to cause problems in some cases from a raw materials perspective and in others from getting finished products to market. Where there is limited ability to increase supply, those selling into the building products space are likely to make more money as they should have strong pricing power – in the US chemical space, we would favor Westlake as a potential big winner from this trend, but Huntsman should also be on the list.

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US Polymers Continue To Test Relative Limits

Nov 5, 2021 3:23:23 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polymers, Polyolefins, Polyethylene, Polypropylene, HDPE, US Polymers, demand

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While we are beginning to see some easing in US polyolefin prices we note in today's daily that prices are not falling in step with monomers and so spreads are widening. Because of the very integrated nature of the polyethylene market, we see swings in where the margin is being captured based on relative tightness and today it is squarely biased towards polyethylene in the US. Despite the polymer price declines in the US we maintain a level of pricing that is well above Asia – Exhibit below, but not high enough to attract imports, given the high container rates and the long lead times on shipping. The same is not true for polypropylene, which maintains a spread versus Asia that can cover the very high current costs of transport (bottom exhibit).

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US Propylene Contract Prices Under Pressure

Oct 19, 2021 2:14:12 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polyolefins, Propylene, Ethylene, olefins, US propylene, ethylene prices, energy inflation, energy costs, contract prices

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The propylene chart below shows a significant disconnect between spot and contract prices – more than at any point in recent history, and if the US contract price does not fall it will likely be an indicator that either discounts have increased or that more volume is moving against a spot price marker. The pressure is also on to lower ethylene contract prices, but the propylene spread is far more extreme.

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Changes In US Chemical Fortunes Are Speeding Up

Oct 13, 2021 12:43:03 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polyolefins, Propylene, Ethylene, arbitrage, US propylene, ethane prices, propane feed, propylene prices

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As we hinted in yesterday's report, the wheels are wobbling in the US market, especially for polyolefins and this comes at a time when Asia prices are finding some strength because of production and cost issues – it shows how quickly market dynamics can change in this industry and the closing of the gap between Asia and US propylene prices in the first exhibit below is perhaps the most dramatic example. We see a real opportunity for the wheels to stop wobbling and completely fall of the western wagons in the near term, and as the second exhibit below shows propylene continues lower, and with further to fall to hit PDH economics.

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US Methanol Sees Support From Higher US Natural Gas and Overseas Markets

Sep 29, 2021 2:14:00 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polyolefins, LNG, Methanol, propane, olefins, natural gas, naphtha, chemical production

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The charts below show that North American methanol pricing is seeing support from higher natural gas prices as you would expect, but we are also seeing some significant price improvement in China, See more in today's daily report. If China is coal constrained, as suggested in many of the power-related stories, it may be impacting chemical production from coal at the margin. Alternatively, with LNG prices so high and imported naphtha and propane prices rising in China, the country may be using more coal at the margin to make chemicals.

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Energy Issues In China Hurting Some Chemical Production

Sep 24, 2021 2:42:46 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polyolefins, Energy, Emissions, PET, PTA, Acetic Acid, Monomer, China, vinyl acetate, ethylene chain

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The move by China to reduce overall energy consumption is an effort to make progress on emissions but also to curtail energy demand where there is either a shortage or an over-dependence on coal-based power generation. The immediate impact in the acetic acid chain is clear from exhibit 1 in today's daily report.If these moves in China become more widespread they could reduce the significant near-term surpluses that the country has in polyolefins, PTA and PET. Why consume either expensive or high carbon power to make products that you currently cannot sell and that are either being sold at a loss or flowing into inventory? China has the structure to make decisions like this. Should this happen we could perhaps see a recovery in polyolefins pricing and PET pricing in China – as seen for the acetic chain in the exhibit below. Keeping production in line with the demand in China is important in the very near term as the fall out from the Evergrande collapse suggests that demand into the property market has been inflated and will likely correct negatively – increasing surpluses. China can force material into the export market, if it can find containers and if it is willing to operate at break-even margins. Better to curtail production.

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Volatile Pricing Obscures Underlying Direction For Chemicals & Plastics

Sep 17, 2021 12:40:41 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polymers, Polyolefins, Propylene, Plastics, Ethylene, polymer pricing, volatility, US producers

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We continue to see significant volatility in US product prices, and this increases uncertainty around the underlying direction of the markets for the balance of the year. The recent storms have likely created enough production interruptions to take any slack that had been developing in August out of play, and while we see that in the most recent moves for ethylene and propylene – Exhibit below - it is likely more interesting to see what happens with polymer pricing as we move through the balance of September – as this will determine profits for most. While we focus on the high prices in the US more than we do the prices in Europe, it is also worth noting that European polyolefin margins remain very high, with one local producer confirming this week that records continue to be set in terms of cash flows and unit profitability. The frustration for the US producers impacted by the storm is that while their plant closures may be contributing to the tight markets, they do not get the benefit of the higher margins on the impacted facilities. While we would expect many to produce extremely high numbers for 3Q – a handful will likely lament how much they could have made had their plants operated fully. See more in today's daily report.

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More Examples Emerge Of US Chemical/Polymer Market Tightness Post Ida

Sep 3, 2021 1:18:43 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polymers, Polyolefins, PVC, US Polymer, Ethylene, US Chemicals, olefins, US polyethylene, Hurricane Ida, Chemical pricing, ethylene prices

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It is increasingly likely that Hurricane Ida will add another leg of strength to US chemical pricing more broadly, with a host of prolonged production outage news and force majeure notices, giving momentum to some price increase announcements for September, some of which looked very speculative at the time they were made. Buyers will have an eye on continued pockets of supply chain disruption, strong demand in general, particularly for those levered to holiday spending, and the not insignificant fact that we still have almost three months of hurricane season to go! Note that two of the more disruptive storms of 2020 hit in October.  We talk specifically about PVC in today's daily - See price chart below.

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The Tale Of Two Regions: Asia Loose, US Tight

Aug 26, 2021 12:49:40 PM / by Cooley May posted in Chemicals, Polymers, Polyolefins, Propylene, Styrene, PET, Surplus, polymer producers, US Polymers

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China trade data for chemicals and polymers points to a dramatic swing in net imports, partly due to the new capacity added over the last 12 months. Imports are down, and exports are up. Despite the logistic challenges of moving the products and the powerful pull on consumer durables from China driven by US and European demand – much of which consume significant volumes of polymers and chemicals locally. The trade swings talk to the significant capacity additions and the relatively sluggish consumer within China, where spending patterns remain subdued because of the Pandemic. Even with a recovery in domestic spending, China has probably added 2 to 3 years of demand growth in current capacity adds – most notably for polyolefins and PET, but also for styrene, where we believe demand growth could be slowing. If logistics improve and container rates come down, the surpluses in China will have a severe negative impact on international prices. This development will likely be seen in either polymer quantities flowing faster/more freely around the globe or because the export rate of consumer durables will pick up even further at the expense of durable producers in the US and Europe.

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