Platts Petrochemicals - Asian Olefins Outlook Feb 2013 - Chua Sok Peng

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Transcript of Platts Petrochemicals - Asian Olefins Outlook Feb 2013 - Chua Sok Peng

CHUA Sok Peng,

Managing Editor, Asian Petrochemicals | February, 2013

Asian Olefins 2013: Changing Landscapes

� Ethylene 2013: Rebound on naphtha, European demand

� Derivatives: PE demand weak, MEG faces challenge as MTO-based MEG starts up

� Propylene 2013: Prices rising but derivatives hurt

� Derivatives: PP still in the red, ACN struggling

� Butadiene 2013: A seemingly good year

� Derivatives: New synthetic rubber drives C4 demand

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Agenda

Ethylene prices rebound from on tight supply

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Ethylene CFR SEA spread still negative

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Ethythylene CFR NEA margin positive

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� Asian cargoes headed towards Europe since mid-December

� European demand unsustainable as downstream PE hurt by rising feedstock. PE producers cutting run rates will lead to excess ethylene being put back in the market � Taiwan Formosa sells 6,000-10,000 mt of spot ethylene via tender

� MEG the only bright spark for ethylene but downstream polyester in a lull

� US ethylene weak, imports for 2012 at 3.27 million mt, down 783,430 mt or 19% from 2011

European demand pushes Asian Ethylene to 4 ½ - year- high

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Europe, Asia arbitrage

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PE prices climbing on cost push factors

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Negative margins for LLDPE, LDPE, HDPE

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MEG the only bright spark for ethylene

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� Ethylene 2013: Rebound on naphtha, European demand

� Derivatives: PE demand weak, MEG faces challenge as MTO-based MEG starts up

� Propylene 2013: Prices rising but derivatives hurt

� Derivatives: PP still in the red, ACN struggling

� Butadiene 2013: A seemingly good year

� Derivatives: New synthetic rubber drives C4 demand

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Agenda

Propylene: Positive margin on turnarounds

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Propylene up on US arbitrage, SEA shortage

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PP margins negative

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Acrylonitrile rising on cost-push factors

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� South Korea's ACN January exports fell 32.8% month on month and 35.2% year on year to 13,453 mt. Exports to key destination China slid 23.7% month on month to 13,361 mt.

� Downstream acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene producers were concerned about firm styrene monomer prices. ABS makes up 30% of ACN derivatives.

� Acrylic fiber makes up 50% of ACN derivatives. China is top spot buyer in Asia but demand will fall as new plants start up.

� China's textile and garment exports weakening as Europe/US demand falls. Exports rose a mere 3% year on year in 2012 to $260 billion, the second lowest level of growth in 20.

Acrylonitrile: Dwindling demand

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� In China: Overcapacity continues to dampen demand. Total capacity 12.7 million mt/year, imports stabilize

� Six new PP plants started up in 2012, total capacity 1.55 million mt/year

� Structural problem: PP homo/raffia grade makes up 50% of Chinese market. Mainly produced by small-to-medium sized companies which lead to intense competition, oversupply. Run rates at less than 70% and losses intensify as propylene prices rise

� China domestic price more than Yuan 500/mt ($80/mt) cheaper than imports since November 2012, resulting in lower demand for imported PP. Market watchers expect similar price gap in 2013.

� East China: PP price fell 16.5% between September 2012 and January 2013, from Yuan 12,100/mt to Yuan 10,100/mt

Chinese PP: Oversupply, low domestic price

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� In Europe : PP market dragged down by a slump in automotive demand, which has fallen to its lowest level in 17 years. European new passenger car sales dropped 8.2% in 2012 to 12.05 million units, the lowest since 1995, latest data from European Automobile Manufacturers' Association (ACEA) showed.

� The 8.2% contraction was the steepest fall on record since 1993 when car demand slumped 16.9%, with major markets Germany, France, Italy and Spain all reporting decreases. December saw sales plunge 16.3% year on year to 799,407 units, continuing the downward trend that started 15 months ago.

� Converters expect their deliveries to customers in the auto segment to weaken significantly this year as car manufacturers scale down operations in Europe amid shrinking demand and overcapacity.

Eurpean PP: Hanging on automobiles

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0.00 1.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00

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2011

2012

China PP Homo imports stabilizing (million mt)

China demand stabilizes as production rises

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0.00 0.20 0.40 0.60 0.80 1.00 1.20 1.40 1.60

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US PP Homo Exports (million mt)

US PP homo exports falling

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� Ethylene 2013: Rebound on naphtha, European demand

� Derivatives: PE demand weak, MEG faces challenge as MTO-based MEG starts up

� Propylene 2013: Prices rising but derivatives hurt

� Derivatives: PP still in the red, ACN struggling

� Butadiene 2013: A seemingly good year

� Derivatives: New synthetic rubber drives C4 demand

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Agenda

Roller coaster ride for Butadiene

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� Feb 22: Asian butadiene at $2,100/mt FOB Korea

� Prices up 44% from 2012 low of $1,455/mt FOB Korea on Dec 7

� China imports up 47% in 2012 to 344,828 mt

� Prices rally on start up of new butadiene rubber plants in China:

2012: Lanxess JV 30l000 mt/year nitrile butadiene rubber

Keyuan Petrochemicals: 70,000 mt/year SBS

Q1: Sinopec Maoming: 100,000 mt/year BR

Zhejiang Transfar: 100,000 mt/year BR

Q2: YPC-GPRO (Nanjing): 100,000 mt/year BR

PetroChina Sichuan: 150,000 mt/year BR

What drives Butadiene? Strong demand

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South Korean producers using LGP for feed as naphtha surges� Feb 1: Lotte Chemical using 10% LPG as feedstock for Daesan steam

cracker to cope with rising naphtha costs. Cracker capacity: 1 million mt/year of ethylene, 500,000 mt/year of propylene, supplies crude C4 feedstock to a 150,000 mt/year butadiene extraction unit at the same location. The change in feedstock will lower production of butadiene. Loss of C4 = 600-800 mt/month

� March 1: YNCC to use 10% butane for No. 1 and No. 2 naphtha-fed steam crackers. No. 1: 860,000 mt/year of ethylene, 450,000 mt/year of propylene; No. 2: 580,000 mt/year of ethylene, 280,000 mt/year of propylene; No.: 3 470,000 mt/year of ethylene, 240,000 mt/year of propylene. No butane will be used in the No. 3 cracker. The three supply crude C4 feedstock to a 240,000 mt/year butadiene extraction unit. Loss of C4 = 600 mt/month

� March 1: Samsung Total to use 10% butane as feedstock for Daesancracker, which can produce 1 million mt/year of ethylene, 600,000 mt/year of propylene and 114,000 mt/year of butadiene

� Thailand’s Bangkok Synthetics to cease butadiene supply (140,000 mt/year) as BSTE will start a new 50,000 mt/yar solution-SBR plant jointly with Japan’s JSR in 2013

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What drives Butadiene? Tight supply

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Butane vs Naphtha

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Butadiene tracks natural rubber

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ABS margin hurt by rising SM

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• The Bulls:� Change to lighter feedstocks an unstoppable trend so

butadiene will surge on tight supply, strong demand.

� China will continue to be biggest importer in the region as more synthetic rubber plants start up.

• The Bears: � Current prices unrealistic especially since natural rubber is

on down trend. Prices will crash as China’s synthetic rubber plants will be delayed.

� US butadiene demand falling. 2012 total imports at 640,834 mt, down 142,000 mt or 18.2% from 2011.

What’s ahead for Butadiene

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Ethylene Propylene Butadiene

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China olefin imports 2010-2012

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Ethylene Propylene Butadiene

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US olefins imports

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THANK YOU

CHUA Sok Peng

Managing Editor, Asian Petrochemicals

February 2013