Asian olefins hit multi-month lows, further downside feared
Write:
Randell [2011-05-20]
SINGAPORE ,May 24-Asian ethylene and propylene spot prices may face further downside after plummeting to multi-month lows last week, amid weak conditions in key derivatives market and a slump in values of feedstock naphtha, market players said on Monday.
With naphtha prices having come down so much, there could be another bottom, said a Japan-based olefins trader.
Last week, ethylene spot prices dived $160-170/tonne (?28-136/tonne) to five-month lows of $1,100-1,140/tonne CFR (cost and freight), while propylene slumped $90-110/tonne to $1,150-1,230/tonne CFR in northeast Asia - levels not seen since January 2010, according to data from ICIS pricing.
Ethylene and propylene are used in manufacturing polymers.
Weekly variable margins for naphtha cracker operators in NE Asia had remained high at $519/tonne on 21 May, partly due to a $98/tonne week-on-week decline in naphtha prices to $645.50-647.50/tonne CFR Japan, data from ICIS pricing margins showed. Some market participants had said that a sharp correction in margins may be overdue.
The robust margins more than double the typical break-even spread of $250/tonne had kept the bulk of the crackers in Asia running at high rates of 90-100% in the first half of the year, market sources said.
The bloodbath in the olefins market started early last week, with ethylene and propylene offers progressively moving lower in a bid to attract interest, but the rapid price plunge kept buyers at the sidelines, they said.
The bearish market sentiment was principally caused by uncertainty over the outlook for the petrochemical industry against the backdrop of credit tightening measures in China and worries about possible contagion of Europe s debt crisis.
Discussions to purchase a second-half June loading ethylene spot cargo from a southeast Asian producer hit a stumbling block following the price plunge.
The trader said the customer had run away, said the producer.
A lack of support from the key polymer pillar responsible for more than 50% of the consumption of ethylene and propylene in Asia may continue to exert pressure on olefins values, despite tight supply due to ongoing cracker turnarounds in the region, market players said.
There was talk of some regional cracker operators mulling cuts in derivative polymer production due to prevailing poor economics.
For instance, standalone variable margins for high density PE remained in the red - at a loss of $35/tonne NE Asia on 21 May, although this was significantly lower than $144/tonne loss registered a week earlier.
With downstream markets suffering so much, there are no bidders in the market, said another olefins trader in Japan.
($1 = ?.80)