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Everchem Updates

VOLUME XXI

September 14, 2023

Everchem’s Closers Only Club

Everchem’s exclusive Closers Only Club is reserved for only the highest caliber brass-baller salesmen in the chemical industry. Watch the hype video and be introduced to the top of the league: read more

March 13, 2020

Spot Propylene

US spot polymer-grade propylene hits 11-year low

US spot polymer-grade propylene fell 1.75 cents Thursday to the lowest level in 11 years, S&P Global Platts data showed.

Spot was assessed Thursday at 24.75 cents/lb FD USG and was last lower March 20, 2009, when it was assessed at 24.4375 cents/lb, according to Platts data.

Sources attributed the fall in pricing to declining prices.

A March PGP was heard done at 23.5 cents/lb MtB-Pipe after the Platts on Close assessment process.

Source: Platts

https://globalrubbermarkets.com/203517/us-spot-polymer-grade-propylene-hits-11-year-low.html

Low oil price, coronavirus to weigh on US chem earnings – Moody’s

Author: Stefan Baumgarten

2020/03/12

HOUSTON (ICIS)–The collapse in oil prices and the spread of the coronavirus will weigh on second-half performance across the US chemicals sector, reducing the likelihood of a strong post-virus rebound in 2020, analysts at credit watchdog Moody’s said in a report on Thursday.

Last week, OPEC and Russia failed to reach an agreement on production levels, which prompted a collapse in crude oil prices.

Meanwhile, on Wednesday the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the coronavirus (Covid-19) a pandemic.

The coronavirus’ continued spread will keep commodity prices soft, and will put more pressure on commodities already strained by new capacity additions, Moody’s said.

Specialty companies will also be hurt by lower demand, but this will be partially offset by the benefit from lower raw material costs.

Additionally, chemical companies with high exposures to industrial end markets will be impacted to a greater degree than those with more exposure to consumer-oriented end markets.

OIL PRICES
The lower oil prices flatten the global cost curve for ethylene producers in North America that use mostly gas-based feedstocks – compared to higher-cost naphtha-based producers in Europe, Asia, and South America, which use feedstocks tied to oil prices, Moody’s said.

US chemical producers, who rely on ethane and other natural gas liquids (NGLs) as feedstock, are vulnerable to low oil prices because their feedstock advantage starts to erode when crude prices fall in relation to those for natural gas.

Moody’s said that US ethylene chain margins already weakened over the past few years with a substantial increase in supply as major US producers started up new facilities on the US Gulf Coast.

“The decline in oil prices is likely to reduce polymer prices by April, especially after several major turnarounds in the US are completed,” the agency said.

Moody’s also said that credit metrics for most ethylene producers are weaker today than when oil prices fell significantly in 2015-16.

Oil prices sustained below $50/bbl could create some pressure on producers, and “ratings could be threatened if prices are sustained below $40/bbl”, the agency said.

Moody’s-rated US petrochemicals producers that could experience weaker metrics in 2020 include Chevron Phillips Chemical (CP Chem), LyondellBasell, Dow Chemical, Westlake Chemical, and NOVA Chemicals.

But the lower oil prices would also weaken prices for other commodity and industrial intermediate chemicals, particularly ethylene glycol, acetyls and oxo chemicals, along with such commodities as methanol, phenol and styrene, the agency said.

A price drop would cut profits for companies like Celanese, Eastman, Dow, Trinseo, TPC, Cabot Corp, Methanex and others, Moody’s said.

While most companies will be able to maintain credit quality, some, “such as Eastman and possibly Methanex could be vulnerable due to an extended decline in commodity prices lasting more than 18 months”, Moody’s said.

SPECIALTIES
Specialty companies will be more insulated from an oil price slump, although low oil prices will hurt companies such as Kraton, which make products that compete directly with oil-based products, and Vantage Specialty Chemicals, because the demand for oleochemicals used in oil and gas applications soften.

Other specialty companies that would get hit by low oil prices include Hexion and Cabot Microelectronics, which supply the oil and gas industry with products such as additives for proppants, surfactants for fracking fluid, and drag reducers for pipelines.

“A common theme in these cases is exposure to the US oil and gas industry, which has weakened since the last step-down in oil prices,” Moody’s said.

Other specialty producers that limited their exposures to the oil industry after oil prices dropped below $50/bbl in 2015-16 will be less hard hit by sustained low prices.

Moody’s cited Ecolab, which spun off its more volatile energy-related business, Koppers, which moved away from the carbon black feedstock business, and Univar, which reduced its exposure to oil prices through mergers and acquisitions.

Specialty chemical companies that focus on coatings, consumer care, high-performance polymers and lubricants would benefit from lower oil prices – though lower demand would offset much of the benefit, Moody’s said.

CORONAVIRUS
At the same time, the spread of the coronavirus weighs on the chemical industry, where producers “depend highly on economic growth”, Moody’s said.

The agency’s current macroeconomic forecast, published just before the oil-related announcements and reports of the increasing spread of the disease within the US, estimates 2.1% GDP growth for the G-20 economies, down from an earlier forecast of 2.4%, and a much higher risk of global recession.

Although fiscal and monetary policy measures will likely limit the damage in individual economies, Moody’s now expects even weaker GDP in 2020 for countries that are key for the chemical industry – including the US, falling to 1.5% in 2020 from 2.3% in 2019; the euro area, to 0.7% in 2020 from 1.2% in 2019; and China, to 4.8% in 2020 from 6.1% in 2019.

“We expect that chemical producers will be hard hit through the first half of 2020, with a number exposed specifically to China, but continued spread of the coronavirus would likely further reduce our current expectations for 2020,” the agency added.

Additional reporting by Al Greenwood

https://www.icis.com/explore/resources/news/2020/03/12/10481814/low-oil-price-coronavirus-to-weigh-on-us-chem-earnings-moody-s

Low oil price, coronavirus to weigh on US chem earnings – Moody’s

Author: Stefan Baumgarten

2020/03/12

HOUSTON (ICIS)–The collapse in oil prices and the spread of the coronavirus will weigh on second-half performance across the US chemicals sector, reducing the likelihood of a strong post-virus rebound in 2020, analysts at credit watchdog Moody’s said in a report on Thursday.

Last week, OPEC and Russia failed to reach an agreement on production levels, which prompted a collapse in crude oil prices.

Meanwhile, on Wednesday the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the coronavirus (Covid-19) a pandemic.

The coronavirus’ continued spread will keep commodity prices soft, and will put more pressure on commodities already strained by new capacity additions, Moody’s said.

Specialty companies will also be hurt by lower demand, but this will be partially offset by the benefit from lower raw material costs.

Additionally, chemical companies with high exposures to industrial end markets will be impacted to a greater degree than those with more exposure to consumer-oriented end markets.

OIL PRICES
The lower oil prices flatten the global cost curve for ethylene producers in North America that use mostly gas-based feedstocks – compared to higher-cost naphtha-based producers in Europe, Asia, and South America, which use feedstocks tied to oil prices, Moody’s said.

US chemical producers, who rely on ethane and other natural gas liquids (NGLs) as feedstock, are vulnerable to low oil prices because their feedstock advantage starts to erode when crude prices fall in relation to those for natural gas.

Moody’s said that US ethylene chain margins already weakened over the past few years with a substantial increase in supply as major US producers started up new facilities on the US Gulf Coast.

“The decline in oil prices is likely to reduce polymer prices by April, especially after several major turnarounds in the US are completed,” the agency said.

Moody’s also said that credit metrics for most ethylene producers are weaker today than when oil prices fell significantly in 2015-16.

Oil prices sustained below $50/bbl could create some pressure on producers, and “ratings could be threatened if prices are sustained below $40/bbl”, the agency said.

Moody’s-rated US petrochemicals producers that could experience weaker metrics in 2020 include Chevron Phillips Chemical (CP Chem), LyondellBasell, Dow Chemical, Westlake Chemical, and NOVA Chemicals.

But the lower oil prices would also weaken prices for other commodity and industrial intermediate chemicals, particularly ethylene glycol, acetyls and oxo chemicals, along with such commodities as methanol, phenol and styrene, the agency said.

A price drop would cut profits for companies like Celanese, Eastman, Dow, Trinseo, TPC, Cabot Corp, Methanex and others, Moody’s said.

While most companies will be able to maintain credit quality, some, “such as Eastman and possibly Methanex could be vulnerable due to an extended decline in commodity prices lasting more than 18 months”, Moody’s said.

SPECIALTIES
Specialty companies will be more insulated from an oil price slump, although low oil prices will hurt companies such as Kraton, which make products that compete directly with oil-based products, and Vantage Specialty Chemicals, because the demand for oleochemicals used in oil and gas applications soften.

Other specialty companies that would get hit by low oil prices include Hexion and Cabot Microelectronics, which supply the oil and gas industry with products such as additives for proppants, surfactants for fracking fluid, and drag reducers for pipelines.

“A common theme in these cases is exposure to the US oil and gas industry, which has weakened since the last step-down in oil prices,” Moody’s said.

Other specialty producers that limited their exposures to the oil industry after oil prices dropped below $50/bbl in 2015-16 will be less hard hit by sustained low prices.

Moody’s cited Ecolab, which spun off its more volatile energy-related business, Koppers, which moved away from the carbon black feedstock business, and Univar, which reduced its exposure to oil prices through mergers and acquisitions.

Specialty chemical companies that focus on coatings, consumer care, high-performance polymers and lubricants would benefit from lower oil prices – though lower demand would offset much of the benefit, Moody’s said.

CORONAVIRUS
At the same time, the spread of the coronavirus weighs on the chemical industry, where producers “depend highly on economic growth”, Moody’s said.

The agency’s current macroeconomic forecast, published just before the oil-related announcements and reports of the increasing spread of the disease within the US, estimates 2.1% GDP growth for the G-20 economies, down from an earlier forecast of 2.4%, and a much higher risk of global recession.

Although fiscal and monetary policy measures will likely limit the damage in individual economies, Moody’s now expects even weaker GDP in 2020 for countries that are key for the chemical industry – including the US, falling to 1.5% in 2020 from 2.3% in 2019; the euro area, to 0.7% in 2020 from 1.2% in 2019; and China, to 4.8% in 2020 from 6.1% in 2019.

“We expect that chemical producers will be hard hit through the first half of 2020, with a number exposed specifically to China, but continued spread of the coronavirus would likely further reduce our current expectations for 2020,” the agency added.

Additional reporting by Al Greenwood

https://www.icis.com/explore/resources/news/2020/03/12/10481814/low-oil-price-coronavirus-to-weigh-on-us-chem-earnings-moody-s

Kensal Green councillor who wanted mattresses tagged welcomes plans to make manufacturers recycle them

PUBLISHED: 17:59 05 March 2020 | UPDATED: 17:59 05 March 2020

Plans to impose mandatory mattress recycling on manufacturers to reduce fly-tipping have been welcomed by a Kensal Green councillor who has been fighting illegal dumping for years.

The Local Government Association last week said the mattress makers should be forced to recycle their products and offer a take-back service, as the cost to councils soars.

Mattresses need specialist treatment due to their bulky nature and mix of metal and fabric components and are fuelling cost pressures on waste and recycling centres.

Cllr Matt Kelcher told the Times in 2018 he wanted a similar scheme brought in. He proposed tagging requirement be placed on private landlords as part of their licence. His calls followed his visit to “mattress mountain” – the council’s recycling centre in Abbey Road that was tasked with getting rid of 600 mattresses a week.

“I’m delighted that the LGA are now lobbying for mandatory mattress tagging to tackle the nationwide dumping epidemic,” he said. “This is a policy I’ve been advocating locally for two years. Once again where Brent leads, Britain follows.

“Brent has faced one huge barrier to implementing this idea. Even if we tagged all local mattresses, people from outside Brent could still drive in to illegally dump without us being able to trace them.

“This is why it’s so important to get national buy in. I’ll be doing all I can to persuade our Council to loudly and proudly support the LGA’s calls for legislative change.”

LGA environment spokesperson Cllr David Renard said: “Dumped mattresses made up a quarter of all fly-tipping incidents in some areas in the past five years.

“Unwanted mattresses are fuelling landfill costs which continue to rise, putting pressure on waste and recycling centres which councils are working hard to keep open.

“Mattresses are bulky and hard to throw away, but are generally recyclable. Manufacturers need to take responsibility for the life-cycle of their mattresses and help councils and consumers dispose of them responsibly.

“Fly-tipping is an illegal and inexcusable blight on society. Offenders need to be given bigger fines and councils need adequate funding to investigate incidents.

https://www.kilburntimes.co.uk/news/crime-court/kensal-green-councillor-who-wanted-mattresses-tagged-welcomes-plans-to-make-manufacturers-recycle-them-1-6547933

Kensal Green councillor who wanted mattresses tagged welcomes plans to make manufacturers recycle them

PUBLISHED: 17:59 05 March 2020 | UPDATED: 17:59 05 March 2020

Plans to impose mandatory mattress recycling on manufacturers to reduce fly-tipping have been welcomed by a Kensal Green councillor who has been fighting illegal dumping for years.

The Local Government Association last week said the mattress makers should be forced to recycle their products and offer a take-back service, as the cost to councils soars.

Mattresses need specialist treatment due to their bulky nature and mix of metal and fabric components and are fuelling cost pressures on waste and recycling centres.

Cllr Matt Kelcher told the Times in 2018 he wanted a similar scheme brought in. He proposed tagging requirement be placed on private landlords as part of their licence. His calls followed his visit to “mattress mountain” – the council’s recycling centre in Abbey Road that was tasked with getting rid of 600 mattresses a week.

“I’m delighted that the LGA are now lobbying for mandatory mattress tagging to tackle the nationwide dumping epidemic,” he said. “This is a policy I’ve been advocating locally for two years. Once again where Brent leads, Britain follows.

“Brent has faced one huge barrier to implementing this idea. Even if we tagged all local mattresses, people from outside Brent could still drive in to illegally dump without us being able to trace them.

“This is why it’s so important to get national buy in. I’ll be doing all I can to persuade our Council to loudly and proudly support the LGA’s calls for legislative change.”

LGA environment spokesperson Cllr David Renard said: “Dumped mattresses made up a quarter of all fly-tipping incidents in some areas in the past five years.

“Unwanted mattresses are fuelling landfill costs which continue to rise, putting pressure on waste and recycling centres which councils are working hard to keep open.

“Mattresses are bulky and hard to throw away, but are generally recyclable. Manufacturers need to take responsibility for the life-cycle of their mattresses and help councils and consumers dispose of them responsibly.

“Fly-tipping is an illegal and inexcusable blight on society. Offenders need to be given bigger fines and councils need adequate funding to investigate incidents.

https://www.kilburntimes.co.uk/news/crime-court/kensal-green-councillor-who-wanted-mattresses-tagged-welcomes-plans-to-make-manufacturers-recycle-them-1-6547933