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Industry experts watch for impact on resin prices from Ukraine crisis

上传日期 : 2022.03.02


Industry experts watch for impact on resin prices from Ukraine crisis



Copy of UkraineInteriorMinistry_i.jpg
Damage to an unspecified location in Ukraine, posted by the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine.



The Ukraine crisis could lead to higher resin prices in North America and other parts of the world, according to market watchers contacted by Plastics News.

Russia launched a military attack on neighboring Ukraine on Feb. 23, sending global commodity prices up, even as financial markets tumbled.

Higher oil and natural gas prices could have a macro effect on resin prices. Commodity resin prices that had been on an upward run since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020 had finally started to come down in late 2021. The Ukraine crisis could change that trend.

"By introducing severe uncertainty into world oil markets, the Ukraine situation will potentially underpin some resin supplier efforts to push price increases on the basis of higher energy prices," market veteran Phil Karig said in an email. Karig is managing director of Mathelin Bay Associates in St. Louis.

"The key question is how long geopolitics will hang over the market," he added. "A short conflict in Ukraine is unlikely to overwhelm our domestic supply/demand resin fundamentals for long. A longer conflict accompanied by escalating sanctions on Russia and Russian counter moves in a back and forth fashion could move the world and resin markets into situations that are difficult to predict."

Industry consultant Esteban Sagel added in an email that, from a short-term standpoint, "we need to consider how oil prices are evolving."

"Polyolefin prices in Asia are highly correlated to oil prices," said Sagel, principal of Chemical and Polymer Market Consultants in Houston. "Therefore, as oil prices move higher, polyolefin prices in Asia will follow."

Analysts with Wood Mackenzie echoed the concerns, saying that for the chemicals industry the "short-term impact of the situation in Ukraine is likely to be felt through two main petrochemical channels: energy prices and sanctions. Any additional premiums will probably have to be absorbed in the form of reduced margins."

In addition, Wood Mackenzie noted, Russia accounts for nearly 16 percent of total European petrochemical production, with its highest exposure in the polyethylene chain. This makes Russia an important — but not critical — contributor to the industry.

As of 11 a.m. on Feb. 24, West Texas intermediate oil prices were up almost 6 percent to more than $97 per barrel. U.S. natural gas prices also were up almost 3 percent to more than $4.60 per million British thermal units (BTUs). The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down almost 600 points — or almost 2 percent — in the same time frame.

Those markets later made surprising recoveries, even though WTI oil finished the day up almost 1 percent to just under $93 per barrel. Natural gas declined more than 1 percent to $4.57, and the Dow Jones finished the day essentially flat vs. the day before.

"The way this impacts North America is by preventing our prices from dropping," Sagel added. "The U.S. needs to export large volumes of polyethylene, and Asia needs to be part of the export equation. Before this crisis, PE prices in North America needed to decrease in order to become competitive in Asia. As prices in that region move higher, our prices may not fall as much as some were expecting."

Polypropylene prices may also remain high, according to Sagel, lifted by PE prices. He pointed out that the PP to PE price ratio in North America has ranged between 1.15 and 1.25 since 2018.

That ratio "has been at 1.25 in recent months, but I don"t expect it to go below 1.15 as long as supply remains tight in the region. So if PE prices remain high, PP prices will follow a similar trend."

Other resin-related markets could be affected by the crisis as well. Ukraine exports about 1.9 billion pounds per year of benzene — a feedstock used to make styrene monomer — and more than 1.6 billion pounds of PVC resin, according to the ICIS Supply & Demand Database. The country also imports more than 1.4 billion pounds of PP resin and more than 1 billion pounds of PET per year.

In a Feb. 23 webinar, PN economics editor Bill Wood said that the new pressures will add to existing problems for individual businesses. "One thing I know, the uncertainty we"re dealing with at the moment probably won"t result in lower costs," he said.

"Expect more of the same, only more intense," Wood said. "If you get caught up worried about all the myriad possibilities, you"re going to end up in more trouble than you started with. Keep it focused, stay balanced, think about one or two different things."


source : https://www.plasticsnews.com/news/industry-experts-watch-impact-resin-prices-ukraine-crisis

edit : plastic handler http://www.ihandler.co.krc


자료출처 : www.plasticsnews.com, edit : handler

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