Tuesday, November 01, 2011

urea prices

Yuzhnyy sell three new panamax cargoes at $478-480 with 5-6 in total expected
to load for India.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

10 Decrepit Countries That Will Never Boom Again

1 JAPAN
2 GERMANY
3 ITALY
4 NETHERLANDS
5 AUSTRIA
6 SWITZERLAND
7 BELGIUM
8 SWEDEN
9 FRANCE
10 SPAIN

The world GDP will explode from $73 trillion to $370 trillion in 2050, according to Citi's Willem Buiter. This corresponds to an average real growth rate of 4.2% annually.
"But growth will be far from uniform," says Buiter.
Europe dominates Buiter's list of the slowest growing countries. Lagging behind a developing Asia, Japan is the only non-European nation among the bottom ten.
America will grow relatively well for a developed economy, at 2.5% annually.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/slowest-growing-countries-2011-2##ixzz1byqsgRSN

The 10 Fastest Growing Economies Of The Next 40 Years

The 10 Fastest Growing Economies Of The Next 40 Years

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/

#1 Nigeria
YoY growth rate: 8.5%
GDP in 2050: $9.5 trillion (#6 in the world)
In four decades, Nigeria's working age population should increase by 123%, and it has started to exploit its large natural resource endowments more sustainably. Its private sector has spawned companies that are expanding to other African regions, but improvements are need in healthcare to raise the low life expectancy.
Projections provided by Citi. GDP in 2050 was given by Citi or estimated using growth rate.

#2 India
YoY growth rate: 8.0%
GDP in 2050: $86 trillion (#1 in the world)
India will be the largest economy in the world by 2050, but it has to improve its overall infrastructure and extend education to lower castes as well as females in rural areas.
Projections provided by Citi. GDP in 2050 (PPP) was given by Citi or estimated using growth rate.

#3 Iraq
YoY growth rate: 7.7%
GDP in 2050: $2.2 trillion
Iraq's post-war reconstruction and recovery means it will have an estimated 11.7% annual growth during the first five years. Over the next four decades, its working age population should go up by 143.4% and it has abundant oil and gas resources to draw on to finance infrastructure investment.

#4 Bangladesh
YoY growth rate: 7.5%
GDP in 2050: $5.0 trillion
Bangladesh is starting out at the bottom with a GDP per capita that's just 4% of the US, but with recent political stability and a young population it could get impressive growth rates over the next decades.

#5 Vietnam
YoY growth rate: 7.5%
GDP in 2050: $5.0 trillion
Some of Vietnam's many challenges, which include "erratic at best and poor most of the time" exchange rate and macroeconometric policies, will be easy to overcome.

#6 Philippines
YoY growth rate: 7.3%
GDP in 2050: $5.9 trillion
The Philippines' way too low investment rate at 14.5% of GDP needs to rise, but the country will benefit from a growing population and large community of workers sending remittances back and gaining foreign experience.

#7 Mongolia

YoY growth rate: 6.9%
GDP in 2050: $150 billion
Mongolia's economy, based "overwhelmingly" on resource extraction, is set for 14.2% GDP growth in the next five years. Right now the "quite remarkable" saving and investment rates put Mongolia on the right path for potential growth.

#8 Indonesia

YoY growth rate: 6.8%
GDP in 2050: $14 trillion (#4 in the world)
A 17.9% increase by 2050 in an already-large working age population could set up Indonesia for China-like growth, if capital formation and infrastructure catch up. Natural resource extraction, a major source of growth so far, needs more investment.

#9 Sri Lanka

Image: transaid images via Flickr
YoY growth rate: 6.6%
GDP in 2050: $1.3 trillion
In the next decades, Citi expects improved governance and post-conflict growth in Sri Lanka after the end of the civil war with the Tamil Tigers. The investment rate has to rise to make up for a population that will all but stop growing.

#10 Egypt

YoY growth rate: 6.4%
GDP in 2050: $6.0 trillion (#10 in the world)
A 60.8% rise in Egypt's working age population by 2050 will be a "big plus" if job opportunities keep up. Citi is optimistic about economic reform after the revolution.

Tuesday, October 04, 2011

Xylene prices, Toluene prices, benzene prices

Singapore (Platts)--4Oct2011/657 am EDT/1057 GMT

China's ongoing National Day holidays, falling crude and the worsening fiscal woes in the US and Europe exerted downward pressure on Asian aromatics prices, which tumbled around 2% Tuesday morning.

Asian paraxylene was pegged at $1,576.50/mt CFR Taiwan/China on Tuesday morning, down $22.50/mt or 1.4%, from Monday's close.

An offer for an any November arrival parcel was posted at $1,590/mt CFR Taiwan/China, down $9/mt from Monday's closing price. But with no buyers to fix a floor price, the offer further retreated to $1,585/mt CFR.

"There's no response to the offer and I can see many sellers in the market now," said a market participant.


With China closed for its National Day holiday this week, downstream purified terephthalic acid makers were not available to pick up spot PX. "Only Chinese end-users can buy the cargoes at low prices now, but all of them are on holiday," said a Singapore-based trader.

PX feedstock isomer-grade mixed xylenes was also south-bound early Tuesday morning with sellers seeking to offload their November cargoes amid a dearth of buyers.

Platts pegged isomer-MX FOB Korea and CFR Taiwan benchmarks at a two-and-a-half-month low of $1,246.50/mt and $1,261.50/mt Tuesday morning, respectively, down by $16/mt from Monday's close.

The last time Platts assessed isomer-MX lower on July 15,2011, at $1233.50/mt FOB Korea and $1,247.50/mt CFR Taiwan.

Early Tuesday, at least two traders were offering November cargoes initially at $1,285/mt CFR Taiwan. The offers were eventually reduced to $1,260/mt CFR Taiwan but no buyers were interested.

"The fundamentals for [isomer-MX] were unstable and the PX market looks weak," said a South Korean trader. The PX-MX spread was at a five-week-low of $311.50/mt Monday. Producers typically need a spread of $230/mt between the xylenes to break even.

Meanwhile, Asian toluene was pegged at $1,029/mt FOB Korea, down $19/mt, or 1.8%, from Monday. This was attributed to bearish factors such as the weak upstream energy complex and a bleak economic outlook in the West.

The Chinese National Day holiday was also blamed for the relative lull in the market, according to industry participants, who added that a clearer view could be ascertained after that. Another market watcher said that traders were unable to liquidate their positions because of the Chinese holiday.

Nonetheless, bids and offers for toluene were placed at $1,035-1,060/mt FOB Korea for any November cargoes Tuesday morning, and $990-1,010/mt FOB Korea for any December cargoes. These bids were lower than off-screen postings Monday, with the best November bid at $1,055/mt FOB Korea, and the December bid-offer range at $1,010-1,015/mt FOB Korea. Deals were heard done at $1,013/mt FOB Korea for December.

Asian benzene prices fell below $1,000/mt FOB Korea mark for the first time in 2011 Tuesday morning, and morning pegs were down $22.5/mt compared with Monday's assessment of $1,009/mt FOB Korea. The last time Platts prices were assessed below $1,000/mt was December 20, 2010.

December bids were reported at $971/mt FOB Korea, Tuesday morning against offers at $979/mt FOB Korea, during a busy morning.

November bids were reported at $985/mt FOB Korea, with November to December time spreads bid at $10/mt versus offers at $20/mt, implying a continued backwardation.

Monday, October 03, 2011

PET prices

Singapore (Platts)--29Sep2011/157 am EDT/557 GMT

Asian polyethylene terephthalate buyers have slashed purchase volumes despite cooling PET prices in the region after a recent surge, as they expect prices to fall further, producers told Platts this week.

PET prices started trending lower in the past two weeks on lower feedstock costs, with PET on an FOB Northeast Asia basis assessed at $1,670/mt Wednesday, down $45/mt week on week, while FOB SEA prices were assessed at $1,690/mt, down $50/mt over the same period.


Based on the latest feedstock prices, the breakeven price for PET is estimated at $1,613.24/mt, down $110.56/mt from last week. On Wednesday, CFR China monoethylene glycol was assessed at $1,212/mt, down $108/mt week on week, while CFR China purified terephthalic acid was assessed at $1,238/mt, down $52/mt over the same period.

The dip in the past weeks comes after five consecutive weeks of increasing prices.

On August 10, FOB NEA and SEA PET was assessed at $1,650/mt. The lower price in the typically weak year-end demand season has resulted in optimism on part of the buyers.

"People are taking a wait-and-see approach, and buying [limited volumes to meet immediate requirements]," said a producer in South Asia.

Currently, buyers are making inquiries for around 500 mt-1,000 mt cargoes, while earlier they would buy up to 30,000 mt at one go.

A South Korean producer said his customers were breaking down their demand into about four batches. "They believe prices will fall [in the near future], and don't want to take a risk," said the source.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

BUTADIENE prices

Singapore (Platts)--21Sep2011/344 am EDT/744 GMT

China Petroleum & Chemical Corp, or Sinopec, cut its ex-works prices for butadiene in the eastern and southern provinces for a second time in September, by Yuan 1,000/mt (157/mt), or nearly 4%, to Yuan 26,000/mt, effective Wednesday, traders said.

In East China, Sinopec Yangzi Petrochemical, Sinopec Shanghai Petrochemical and Zhenhai Refining & Chemical lowered their ex-works butadiene prices to Yuan 26,000/mt, or about $3,410/mt on an import parity basis, down from Yuan 27,000/mt on September 14.

Similarly, in South China, Guangzhou Petrochemical and Maoming Petrochemical are both offering butadiene at Yuan 26,000/mt.

A trader cited poor local demand, concerns about growing inventory and returning supply as factors behind the price reduction.

BASF Yangzi Petrochemical Company, or BASF-YPC, plans to start up a new butadiene extraction unit at Nanjing, Jiangsu province, over the second half of September. The unit can make 130,000 mt/year of butadiene.

At the end of September, PetroChina's Dushanzi Petrochemical plans to restart its 130,000 mt/year butadiene unit after it completes a 45-day turnaround which began on August 12.

In Taiwan, Formosa Petrochemical is expected to restart its No. 1 steam cracker -- which can make 700,000 mt/year of ethylene and 350,000 mt/year of propylene -- in the second half of September. The cracker supports a 109,000 mt/year butadiene unit.

kraft, magazine, copy, newsprint testliner, fluting paper prices

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Ammonia, DAP, MOP, SOP, Urea prices

New sale out of Black Sea at $588 fob for October For Ammonia

India buys another panamax of US DAP at a higher price of $690 cfr.

IPC sells Russian standard and granular MOP to SE Asia at $535 and $550
cfr for October-November shipment.

Compass Minerals announces $30/short ton increase for standard and
granular SOP.

Mopco awards 25,000 t granular urea at $545 fob.

Sabic sells granular urea cargo in the low $530s fob.

PS, PP, LDPE, LLDPE, HDPE, PS, PET prices

Steel billet prices

London (Platts)--26Sep2011/224 pm EDT/1824 GMT

Decreasing export prices for steel billets shipped out of the Black Sea gathered pace Monday with $20/mt wiped off the Platts assessment as traders negotiated lower prices with supplying mills in Ukraine for October delivery.

Traders and mills with unsold positions for loading in October could see no premium for prompt material as buyers held off from bidding firm in the current market or November supply.

Platts reduced its Black Sea billet assessment by $20/mt to $652.50/mt FOB as a $640-680/mt price range was heard from mills and traders. There was a far greater likelihood of trade activity at the lower end of the range following softening global financial markets.

The Platts Black Sea billet assessment fell from a peak so far this year of $682.50/mt FOB last seen September 15. October supplies said to be tied up with traders and end-users have seen a sudden unwinding and the backwardation with November collapsed.

One Russian supplier said to normally only sell direct to users and not to traders, is offering widely in the market at $650/mt FOB, but no one is buying, said a trading source, based on information from the group's Ukraine office. Other offers available are at $670/mt FOB, the trader said.

Some mills in the region however did not deem $655-660/mt FOB achievable and would take bids for November on this basis.

MARKET 'LONG' HAMPERS BIDS

A trader heard $650-660/mt FOB for November shipment on offer, and stated $650/mt was the maximum bid level. The source would not pay more for offers with October laycans, "as the market is long." Turkish billet offers are holding out for October, but these prices are unlikely to be met, the trader said.

The drop in prices may lead mills to slash output in response to reducing demand in the long steel complex, rather than let the correction extend much farther.

A source at a large international trader said offers for October production are now down to $645-655/mt FOB Ukraine from one mill for 10,000 mt.

He said there were a number of buyers reneging on contracts to buy, and said it could be that lower prices are being seen as a result of mills and traders having to find new business.

"They didn't accept $655/mt FOB bids last week. Well now everything is $10 lower."

REBAR OFFERS DROP IN TURKEY, UAE

Rebar markets heard of a decrease in Turkish export offers to $710/mt FOB, from $715-720/mt FOB last week.

At Monday's IREPAS international rebar exporters' group meeting in St. Petersburg, sentiment was bearish. The UAE's integrated producer Emirates Steel was said to have reduced its prices for October production sales by around $20/mt.

Platts Turkish export rebar assessment fell $5 to $705/mt FOB.

In the meantime, ferrous scrap price levels were said to be holding up, but with no deals heard done and pressure admittedly on the downside. European suppliers want to sell HMS I/II (80/20 blend) at $450/mt CFR Turkey, and with the euro falling the price can more easily come down in dollar terms, said a Benelux-based supplier. US prices for HMS 80/20 were said to hold at around the last trades, at about $470/mt CFR Turkey, scrap traders said.

Platts regional scrap assessment fell $5 to $467/mt CFR Turkish ports to reflect a weaker buying outlook from Turkish mills.

The A3 scrap assessment fell by $3 to $435/mt FOB Black Sea on a likely increase in material available should export demand fall and capacity be cut at regional mills. European scrap prices held at $417.50 FOB Rotterdam.

While the supplier trader said that "scrap is in a delicate balance," the sentiment in billet and rebar would indicate prices of the raw material are under pressure to lower and ensure the metal spread is maintained.

"Scrap is still steady.. what are the Turkish [scrap buyers] going to do, they would need the price to fall to $440/mt CFR to maintain margins," commented a billet trader.

CAUSTIC SODA PRICES

London (Platts)--28Sep2011/625 am EDT/1025 GMT

Caustic soda sources said they were bullish going into the fourth quarter despite a deteriorating macroeconomic backdrop and falling prices in many commodities because tighter supplies are supporting contract prices in Europe and the US.

Sluggish demand for polyvinyl chloride as well as slower demand for other other chlorine applications such as polycarbonates and toluene diisocyanate /diphenylmethane diisocyanate (TDI/MDI) used in the manufacture of polyurethanes, is causing chlorine production to be scaled back, sources said.
European chlorine utilization rates fell from 82.1% in July to 77.3% in August, according to figures from Euro Chlor.

"Margins are being affected by poor chlorine demand and the increase [in the price of caustic] is needed to obtain reasonable electrochemical unit returns," a producer said.

Caustic and chlorine, used in the manufacture of PVC and other petrochemicals, are co-products.

While demand on the caustic soda side of the chlor-alkali chain is not booming, falling chlorine output is causing the caustic soda market to tighten.

Production issues or planned turnarounds have also caused a reduction in caustic soda stocks in recent weeks.

European caustic soda export prices were heard increasing this week to $385-400/mt FOB NWE and $400-410/mt FOB the Mediterranean, while export volumes continued to be limited, sources said.

"We are still receiving inquiries, some from the Nordics, the UK, US East Coast and in an instance South Africa," a producer said Tuesday, adding: "However, we are tight and since we don't have any additional volume we don't even bother discussing numbers."

The supply shortage is also supporting contract price increases going into Q4. During ongoing negotiations Ineos and Dow Chemical revised their target increases to Eur100/mt ($136/mt) last week, while Netherlands-based AkzoNobel announced Tuesday that it would also be pursuing an Eur100/mt. increase in Q4. The contract price for Q3 was assessed at Eur400/mt in July.

"Many suppliers are decreasing production, and as a result contracts are also being set with a maximum consumption level," another producer said.

The US caustic soda market was also in a bullish mood. In the contractual market some producers said that the $65/mt price hike posted last August has been fully implemented due to low inventory levels. In the spot markets, one trader reported selling an October cargo to Latin America $50/mt higher than in August.

Sources attributed the bullish sentiment to recent unplanned outages from US chlor-alkali manufacturers Olin and Oxy, and lower operating rates in the chlorine production for inventory control purposes because downstream PVC demand is still weak.

A recent report from the Chlorine Institute said US chlor-alkali operating rates reached 85% in July, a seven-percentage-point fall from the previous month, and was expected to continue falling in the coming months.

Despite the fact that this year Shintech and Formosa Plastic Corporation USA started additional chlor-alkali capacities, caustic soda prices remained stable as the new production was for captive consumption and both manufacturers have their vinyl chain production fully integrated, sources said.

The increase is supported by firm demand from the pulp and paper, automotive, textile and soap and detergent production in Latin America, sources said. Caustic soda export prices were talked this week at around $440-450/mt FOB USG, while the contract value was heard close to $500-510/mt.

In Asia too, caustic soda prices have been increasing, especially in China, as producers have cut operations due an extremely weak chlorine market. Caustic soda prices went up despite Q4 contract prices between Northeast Asian producers and customers in Australia being heard concluded at $350-370/mt FOB NE Asia, down $95/mt, or around 21% from settlements for Q3 of $450-460/mt FOB, industry sources said.

Alumina producers, who are a major end-user for contractual caustic soda supplies from Asia, have been facing downward pressure on prices, with FOB Australia alumina prices closing at $363/mt FOB as of Tuesday, down $2/mt from $365/mt from September 1 and down $15.50/mt from August 1.

However, despite the lower contract prices for Q4 and falling alumina prices, caustic soda spot prices have rebounded, as exports from China have been drying up due to tight supplies. Since August 23, caustic soda prices have rebounded by $30 to around $375/mt CFR Northeast Asia as of Tuesday.

Domestic prices in eastern China jumped Yuan 300/mt week on week to Yuan 3,200/mt, equating to $502/mt.

Caustic soda prices are rising as producers in China cut rates due to low prices for the co-product chlorine.

Part of the problem in China is structural, with new capacity coming on line for the purpose of producing caustic soda, but no demand for the chlorine co-product, with not many producers having built integrated downstream plants.

Nevertheless, some producers in Europe have expressed concerns about existing tightness. At least one source said that negotiations for October were being done agreeing on a maximum volume.

Some sources expressed concern that if the situation prevailed the availability of caustic stocks could be restricted going forward, potentially affecting ability to meet demand. "If chlorine demand continues slowing down, thus further limiting production in the chlor-alkali chain, it could come down to putting contractual customers on allocation," a source said.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Feedstock prices, ethylene prices

Houston (Platts)--12Sep2011/436 pm EDT/2036 GMT

US ethylene cracker margins dipped nearly 10% week on week to levels not seen since early August on the back of falling spot prices.

Margins using ethane/propane mix as feedstock dropped 3.31 cents/lb, or 9.8% to close Friday at 30.40 cents/lb, according to Platts data.

Margins using ethane were also down 2.92 cents/lb, or 9.6% to 27.49 cents/lb.

Spot ethylene fell 3.375 cents/lb week on week, assessed Friday at 59.75-60.25 cents/lb on a 3- to 30-day basis that reflected backwardation in the market. The assessment was the lowest since July 21, when spot ethylene was also assessed at 60 cents/lb, according to Platts data.

One veteran trader attributed the drops to weaker-than-expected demand from downstream markets despite two producers initiating tunarounds in the US Gulf Coast region this month.

In feedstocks for the week, ethane shed .50 cents/lb to close at 71.25 cents/gal, while propane rose 1.60 cents/gal to 158.70 cents/gal.

Light naphtha was again the lowest-yielding feedstock and posted the biggest drop, down 5.35 cents/lb to 9.47 cents/lb.

Margins using propane as feedstock dropped more than 21% -- 4.33 cents/lb -- to 15.70 cents/lb.

The cracker margin estimates use the current spot price and yields of the various cracker products from cracking various light and heavy feedstocks.

On Monday, spot ethylene was heard talked at 59.75-60.50 cents/lb, with October slightly lower at 59.50-60.125 cents/lb.

Wednesday, September 07, 2011

Styrene Prices

London (Platts)--6Sep2011/751 am EDT/1151 GMT European styrene prices dropped $15/mt Monday as the market tracked weaker benzene and crude futures. Styrene prices were assessed by Platts at $1,445/mt FOB Rotterdam on Friday. The energy complex reacted to further financial market turbulence as European stocks plunged by about 5% in mid-afternoon trading on Monday, hit by tensions over the risk of recession in leading economies and debt in the eurozone. Market activity was reduced due to a holiday in the US which closed the markets there. In Europe, with benzene prices lower, both September and October values were seen priced at $1,430-1,450/mt FOB ARA but later prices moved lower, with October easing further on the suggestion that the market had become backwardated due to supply likely to be tighter in September than in October. Sources reported that September was pricing at $1,425-1,435/mt FOB ARA, while October was seen at $1,405-1,430/mt FOB ARA. A 1,000 mt parcel for September was heard done at $1,430/mt FOB ARA but details could not be confirmed. Despite the notion that a backwardation implies firmer demand, sources said that this was only due to the unscheduled cuts made in late August in addition to the scheduled turnarounds that are due to start in September. "October may well stay backwardated as it has less pressure on it...that should mean September should be higher as it is the tighter month," a trader said. Despite this, sources said that weaker demand from September onwards could lead to lower benzene and styrene prices. "Most [styrene] players are covered. Looking at the macroeconomic picture and production indicators there is a weakness," a second trader said. "Most people have been looking at supply but not demand, and demand is the weakest link," the same trader added. Sources also pointed to the inflationary effect of crude and how styrene was pricing against it. "Crude oil is much more expensive compared to styrene; Brent should be lower. The relationship to Brent, styrene is undervalued, while benzene was overvalued. Based on fundamentals, Brent should be at around $70-80/barrel," the second trader said.

Monday, September 05, 2011

caustic soda prices

Tokyo (Platts)--26Aug2011/229 am EDT/629 GMT

Japan's Showa Denko will increase its local list prices of caustic soda by Yen 12/kg ($156/mt) for shipments from September 15 to reflect rising fuel costs since early this year, the company said Friday without providing effective prices.

Showa Denko has a 100,000 mt/year caustic soda plant in Kawasaki, eastern Japan.

According to Platts data, the FOB Singapore 380 CST high sulfur fuel oil price averaged $659.64/mt in July, compared with $479.57/mt in January. --Fumiko Dobashi, fumiko_dobashi@platts.com

Urea prices, DAP prices

New Delhi, Aug 18 (PTI) The average global price of urea has gone up by 48 per cent to USD 507.5 a tonne in the last four months leading to increase in subsidy bill of the government, Parliament was informed today.
In a written reply to the Lok Sabha, Minister of State for Chemicals and Fertilisers Srikant Jena said the average urea price in the international market has risen to USD 507.5 per tonne in July against USD 343.25 per tonne in April.
He pointed out that the prices of other important crop nutrients like di-ammonium phosphate (DAP), muriate of poatsh (MOP) have also risen in the global markets.
"As a repercussion of increase in international prices, India is buying at higher cost and consequently leading to higher subsidy and increased selling prices," Jena said.
At present, the maximum retail price (MRP) of urea stands at Rs 5,310 per tonne, while, under the nutrient-based subsidy (NBS) regime introduced from April 1, 2010, firms can fix the retail prices of 22 varieties of decontrolled potassic and phosphatic (P&K) fertilisers.
International prices of DAP rose by 6 per cent to USD 701.92 per tonne in July this year compared to USD 663.75 per tonne in April in the same year, while prices of MOP rose by six per cent to USD 462.50 per tonne against USD 437.50 per tonne in the same period.
Prices of phosphoric acid, an important industrial acid used in making of fertilisers, in the global markets in July 2011 rose by seven per cent to USD 1,050 per tonne against USD 980 per tonne in April 2011.
Rock phosphate -- a raw material used in making triple super phosphate and ammonium phosphate fertilisers -- rose by five per cent to USD 178.13 per tonne in July this year compared to USD 168.88 per tonne in April of the same year.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

steel rebar prices

New York (Platts)--29Aug2011/1159 am EDT/1559 GMT

Gerdau Long Steel North America plans to raise transaction prices of steel reinforcing bar by $20/st for mill shipments starting September 19, according to a letter sent to customers Friday and seen by Platts on Monday.

Gerdau said "market conditions" drove the price increase, adding that it would "continue to monitor the market ... and reserve the right to make adjustments to maintain our competitive position across all Gerdau Long Steel product lines."

Gerdau last adjusted prices July 1. It originally proposed raising prices of rebar prices by $30/st but later revised that figure to $20/st, matching price hikes that competitors have announced. Transaction prices remained flat in August.

The current Platts price assessment for US-made No. 6 rebar remained steady Monday, selling in a range of $720-740/st ex-works Southeast mill.

Tampa, Florida-headquartered Gerdau is the second largest producer in North America of steel rebar, wire rod and other long products. Charlotte, North Carolina-based Nucor is larger.

ferrous scrap prices

The Platts price assessment for shredded ferrous scrap exported in containers fell $7.50/lt Tuesday to a new midpoint of $455/lt FAS East Coast ports, bringing it more into line with domestic shredded prices.

The Platts price assessment for domestic shredded scrap was unchanged Tuesday at a midpoint of $452.50/lt delivered to Midwest mills.

Meanwhile, a Northeast scrap broker said that current offers for containers FAS East Coast "should be $450/lt for shred."

"My company has been very active, India is still buying," he said, adding that landed selling prices are now $495-508/lt CFR.

Sales of US shredded ferrous scrap into India have continued, but prices have receded slightly from a peak of about $510/lt CFR. The Northeast broker explained that Indian buyers are looking for the least costly scrap source. They negotiate between suppliers in the US and UK, which this week lowered offers into India, likely dragging down ex-US pricing as well.

"The UK dropped offers last week to below $500 (CFR India), so I think you will see downward pricing out of the US this week," he said.

A Southeastern scrap dealer has also seen prices for exported shredded slide just a little. Last week, he sold at $465/lt FAS Port of Savannah, Georgia. Now, he said, "$460/lt is very doable."

Demand for US material continues from offshore, he said, as well as from domestic mills, which must compete on price or lose tonnage to exports.

The Southeast dealer said he expected domestic ferrous pricing to remain at August levels, with a slight chance for a small increase. "I think if they [mills] were offered level [pricing] they would take it," he said.

"There's lots of talk sideways ... but also some resistance; some [scrap sellers] think it should be up $5-10."

Scrap supply-side challenges are underpinning prices in the US, he said. "Supply is still driving it. There is not an abundance of material," he added, echoing sentiments ranging from the Northeast to the Midwest US.

Scrap dealer margins are being compressed, he explained, as the cost to bring material into his yard has increased even as mills have enjoyed stable raw material pricing for the past two to three months.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

polystyrene prices

London (Platts)--30Aug2011/651 am EDT/1051 GMT

Ineos Styrenics said Tuesday it would seek a Eur30/mt ($43/mt) increase in polystyrene prices in Europe, effective September 1, to restore margins.

Since the start of the second quarter, polystyrene net contract prices have fallen by Eur260/mt from Eur1,540/mt in March to Eur1,280/mt FD NWE in July, while styrene monomer contracts have fallen Eur222/mt since then, according to Platts data, as both demand and feedstock costs fell.

This represents a Eur38/mt margin erosion for producers.
The year-to-date 2011 margin decrease contrasts markedly with 2010 when polystyrene producers made a Eur118/mt margin gain as the Eur349/mt increase in polystyrene prices contrasted with a Eur231/mt gain in styrene contracts.

Although feedstock spot prices started to rise at the start of August, they have since fallen again as derivative demand is expected to remain weak through the third and fourth quarters, according to sources.

Some polystyrene producers said last week they expected the styrene contract to either rollover or fall in September.

coconut oil prices, palm oil prices, soybean oil prices,US$


paper, newsprint, kraftliner, testliner, fluting, A4 prices


Monday, August 29, 2011

Butadiene prices

Houston (Platts)--24Aug2011/622 pm EDT/2222 GMT

ExxonMobil and LyondellBasell nominated their September contract prices for butadiene Wednesday at 180 cents/lb and 175 cents/lb, respectively, according to a market participant.

The Exxon nomination was at a 6-cents discount to the August contract price, which settled last month at 186 cents/lb.

The September nomination at 175 cents/lb by Lyondell was at a rollover from the August price.
Recently, US butadiene spot prices had fallen over the week on sluggish demand, with the last offer heard Monday at 181 cents/lb and the market last pegged Wednesday at 175 cents/lb, according to various sources.

The two remaining producers, TPC and Shell, have not yet released their nominations, said a source. Exxon and Lyondell could not be reached for comment by the time of publication.

titanium dioxide prices

WILMINGTON, Del., Aug. 18, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Effective Oct. 1, 2011, DuPont Titanium Technologies announces a net price increase of $500 (USD) per metric ton for all DuPont™ Ti-Pure® titanium dioxide grades (TiO2) sold in Asia Pacific.

caustic soda prices

Tokyo (Platts)--26Aug2011/229 am EDT/629 GMT

Japan's Showa Denko will increase its local list prices of caustic soda by Yen 12/kg ($156/mt) for shipments from September 15 to reflect rising fuel costs since early this year, the company said Friday without providing effective prices.

Showa Denko has a 100,000 mt/year caustic soda plant in Kawasaki, eastern Japan.

According to Platts data, the FOB Singapore 380 CST high sulfur fuel oil price averaged $659.64/mt in July, compared with $479.57/mt in January

STEEL BILLET prices

The London Metal Exchange's billet futures contract stands to shed stock from its global warehousing network after one major player canceled up to 75% of the physically-delivered contract's warranted tonnage Monday to sell material in the physical market, participants said Friday.

More trading houses participating in the futures contract joined the cancellation spree Tuesday, when canceled warrants reached 46,930 mt, or 84% of the total 55,380 mt LME billet stock, according to a source close to the activity.

Total stocks in the exchange's registered warehousing network have fallen every day but one since Monday, finishing the week at 54,015 mt -- the lowest since August 16.
Users of the contract hoped that the cancellation signaled warranted billet being moved to a different warehouse, perhaps having found better incentives from another warehousing firm.

Even the possibility of the material being re-warranted at the same warehouse was talked about; but this is not the case, in small part due to charges for putting material back on warrant at warehouses, according to the source.

Now that the cash price on the LME contract has risen to $690-700/mt on a bid/ask basis -- compared with physical billet offers of $700-710/mt CFR Turkey from Black Sea suppliers -- the trading house will sell warehouse material to roll into reinforcing bar and other long products

A billet shortage in major commercial trading areas such as the Black Sea has driven up prices.

"The LME billet price was too low [compared with the physical market price] so people bought onto the contract a few months ago," the source said. "Those same people are now selling material they bought then on the physical market; unless the LME price rises to better reflect the physical market, this will continue to happen."

The LME cash price has risen to now better represent the price of buying physical billet and shipping it into warehouse, another source close the situation added.

This view is shared by other traders using the contract.

"I don't think what [the trader canceling warrants] has done is irresponsible: the movement of the contract into regions where there is no commercial billet trade diluted the LME cash price; weakening it and this has led to the situation this week," a third source said.

"Since the market moved away from Turkish and Black Sea markets to include warehouses where there is no major commercial trade such as the US and Western Europe, the differential between the LME cash price and the physical market widened to around $100/mt," the second source said. "Then somebody bought a lot of futures, sending the cash price up; this isn't helpful for the development of the contract though."

Interest in the contract from billet producers has been thin, and, after the illiquidity of the LME contract was exposed this week, it's unlikely to win any more favor among steel mills, the third source said.

LLDPE, HDPE film prices

Initial September PE prices in Asia have been announced with decreases from August, although the market remains under downward pressure as most buyers expect further decreases in the coming weeks and remain unwilling to purchase for now, as per ChemOrbis. Trading activity remained extremely limited this week in both China and Southeast Asia as buyers are hesitant to replenish stocks given widespread concerns about the health of the global economy. Converters in China complained that the start of the traditional high season for agricultural film has not led to any real improvement in demand over the past few weeks.
Import LLDPE film prices for September have been announced with decreases of US$30-100/ton in China. Few September prices for HDPE film were reported with rollovers this week. Producers complained that their new offers are meeting with little interest from buyers even after their price reductions, with only a few deals reported towards the lower end of the overall offer range. Inside China, domestic producers conceded to decreases of CNY100-600/ton ($16-94/ton) towards the end of this week in the face of persistently poor buying interest.
In Southeast Asia, import PE prices dropped at the lower end of the range this week as Middle Eastern producers returned to the market with decreases on September prices. A Saudi Arabian producer reduced their September prices by US$20/ton for HDPE film and US$30/ton for LLDPE film while complaining that their new offers are not being met with much interest from buyers despite prices being competitive when compared with other import origins. In the region's local markets, players in Indonesia experienced sales slowdown this week despite a cut by domestic producers by US$20/ton for HDPE and by US$40/ton for LLDPE. Distributors in Malaysia reported that producers announced initial September prices with rollovers this week as they have been unable to make sales at the new producer price levels amid buyers believe that prices will drop after the holidays, Buyers have not been tempted back to the market by rumors that local supplies for September will be limited. Buyers in both China and Southeast Asia are electing to remain on the sidelines for now in anticipation of seeing further price decreases in September. Players are generally pessimistic about the demand outlook for next month, saying that they do not believe that the traditional high season for agricultural film in China or the usual post-Ramadan pick-up in demand in Southeast Asia is likely to make any real impact on the market in September.

LDPE, LLDPE prices

Low density polyethylene demand has come under pressure in Asia, as end-product converters are increasingly replacing the resin with cheaper alternatives, industry sources said Monday.

"With C6 [metallocene] LLDPE prices mid-way between C4 [butane] LLDPE and LDPE prices, buyers are switching to C6 LLDPE," a regional producer said. "Especially for multi-layer extrusion purposes," which includes packaging material such as bags used to contain bread.

Converters typically use a combination of C4 LLDPE and LDPE for the end- product, but now C6 LLDPE can be used as a substitute for LDPE in certain applications as it's price is below LDPE's.

Industry sources said the recent trend has lowered demand for general purpose grade LDPE by 10-20% over the last few months. They pointed out that other LDPE grades, such as heavy duty and lamination grades, are not affected by the swing to C6-based LLDPE.

"You can switch to C6 LLDPE in most general purpose applications," another producer said.

Meanwhile, a trader pointed out that "not many people are interested in buying LDPE, and if they really need cargoes, they'll buy in small quantities."

Platts on Monday assessed C4-based LLDPE at $1,325/mt CFR Far East Asia. C6-based LLDPE typically commands a $100-150/mt premium over its C4 variant, according to market sources.

In comparison, LDPE was assessed at $1,539/mt CFR Far East Asia on Monday.

"Increasingly, LDPE is seen almost like an additive," joked one source, who said that his factory adds only about 10% of LDPE resins in required applications, "or replace with C6 LLDPE."

PET prices

Raw material pressures have sent North American prices for PET bottle resin and solid polystyrene higher since Aug. 1.

PET prices are up an average of 3 cents per pound, largely due to higher prices of paraxylene feedstock. That, in turn, has lifted prices for purified terephthalic acid feedstock, which has its U.S. prices tied to paraxylene on a formula basis.

“Paraxylene keeps going up,” one industry insider said. “The margins on it are huge right now. And supplies [of paraxylene] are relatively tight.”

The raw material push has sent prices higher even as North American PET demand largely was flat in the first half of 2011. Demand for the material in Mexico was up slightly, but lower U.S. demand -- caused mainly by continued lightweighting of PET bottles -- negated that growth, the insider said.

Consumer preferences continue to move toward thinner water bottles and away from thicker bottles for carbonated soft drinks, he added. This was evident in a conversation he recently had with a U.S.-based bottler.

PP prices

Houston (Platts)--25Aug2011/549 pm EDT/2149 GMT

Polypropylene demand in the Mexican domestic market during July and August grew 14-15% over the months and May and June, said a source at resin producer Indelpro.

"Customers were preparing for the back to school purchases and producing more food packing, for example. In August, some customers are starting to buy resin to get ready for the end of the year festivities too," said a company source.

Indelpro's polypropylene offer prices were stable for the domestic and export market compared to last week.

"We are waiting to see what's going to happen with the propylene prices in the US, and next week we should have a clear view about where the polypropylene offers are going to be for September," added the source.

In the end of July, Mexican polypropylene producer Indelpro reported August prices with a 3 cents/lb increase for the domestic market, supported by higher nominations in the USGC for August.

After the hike, Indelpro was offering in August for the domestic market at 106 cents/lb DDL bagged for homo raffia and injection, 107 cents/lb DDL bagged for homo film and at 110 cents/lb DDL bagged for co-polymer impact.

For the export market, August Indelpro's offers to Central America, Caribbean and Andean countries jumped $50/mt over July and were pegged at $2,000/mt CFR for homo raffia and injection and at $2,100/mt CFR for co-polymer.

Monday, July 18, 2011

steel billet prices, metal prices

Aluminium was last $5 lower at $2,489. Stocks dropped 7,950 tonnes to 4,404,225 tonnes ahead of ‘Third Wednesday’. Cancelled warrants - the metal booked for removal - fell 4,225 tonnes to 371,375 tonnes.

Copper inventories rose a net 925 tonnes to 462,950 tonnes, although cancelled warrants rose 1,500 tonnes to 21,575 tonnes.

Nickel, which had hit its highest since May 19 at $24,499 on Friday, lost $365 to $23,790. Inventories fell to a new low since March 2009 at 102,354 tonnes after an 840-tonne drop and cancelled warrants fell 708 tonnes.

Zinc was $52 higher at $2,427. Cancelled warrants rocketed 36,275 tonnes or 93.3 percent to 75,175 tonnes, with activity focused on New Orleans, while stocks fell 4,050 tonnes to 887,300 tonnes.

Lead, at $2,732, was $24 higher, while tin fell $100 to $27,100.

Steel billet was indicated at $565/585 versus $565/575 at Friday’s close. Cobalt lost $500 to $34,000/36,000 and molybdenum was at $32,300/36,500.

steel billet prices, metal prices

Aluminium was last $5 lower at $2,489. Stocks dropped 7,950 tonnes to 4,404,225 tonnes ahead of ‘Third Wednesday’. Cancelled warrants - the metal booked for removal - fell 4,225 tonnes to 371,375 tonnes.

Copper inventories rose a net 925 tonnes to 462,950 tonnes, although cancelled warrants rose 1,500 tonnes to 21,575 tonnes.

Nickel, which had hit its highest since May 19 at $24,499 on Friday, lost $365 to $23,790. Inventories fell to a new low since March 2009 at 102,354 tonnes after an 840-tonne drop and cancelled warrants fell 708 tonnes.

Zinc was $52 higher at $2,427. Cancelled warrants rocketed 36,275 tonnes or 93.3 percent to 75,175 tonnes, with activity focused on New Orleans, while stocks fell 4,050 tonnes to 887,300 tonnes.

Lead, at $2,732, was $24 higher, while tin fell $100 to $27,100.

Steel billet was indicated at $565/585 versus $565/575 at Friday’s close. Cobalt lost $500 to $34,000/36,000 and molybdenum was at $32,300/36,500.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

PET prices, PBT prices, EVA prices, LDPE prices

Celanese Corporation’s (NYSE:CE) Ticona engineering polymers business announced an increase in prices of Celanex PBT, Vandar PBT, Impet PET and Riteflex TPC-ET polyesters in the Americas and Europe, effective July 29.

For the Americas, Ticona engineering indicated a price increase of $0.15 per pound, while for Europe it indicated an increase of €0.25 per kilogram.

Effective August 1, 2011, Celanese’s subsidiary Celanese EVA Performance Polymers Inc., is also increasing the price of all grades of Ateva EVA by $0.08 per pound and all grades of LDPE by $0.06 per pound.

Monday, July 11, 2011

LDPE, HDPE, PE prices

New York (Platts)--5Jul2011/634 pm EDT/2234 GMT

US polyethylene contracts for June have settled down at least 2-4 cents/lb ($44-$88/mt) depending on the grade, several sources said Monday.

"Producers stuck close to the ExxonMobil letter," a source said.

ExxonMobil sent a letter to its customers June 24 announcing it would decrease the June price for its LDPE and LLDPE resins 4 cents/lb, while cutting its HDPE resins by 2 cents/lb.

There had been talk that the letter merely set the tone for negotiations and buyers would be able to negotiate more of a decrease. While there was unconfirmed talk of further concessions, several buyers said they had only seen decreases by the amount nominated by ExxonMobil.


The decrease in PE was 0.25-2.25 cents/lb more than the decrease in the June ethylene contract that fell 1.75 cents/lb to 56.75 cents/lb.

The fall in spot PE prices has been more dramatic than for contract prices.

The LLDPE spot export price decreased 8 cents/lb over June and was assessed July 1 by Platts at 59-60 cents/lb FAS Houston. Spot LDPE over the same period was down 10.5 cents/lb at 68-69 cents/lb.

For July, buyers and sellers held widely differing views on how the market would evolve. Producers have a 5 cents/lb price increase on the table, while buyers are looking for another round of decreases.

Sunday, July 03, 2011

butadiene prices

There were signs of a possible slowdown in the Northwest European butadiene market as market sources reported softening demand, improved supply and increased resistance to record high price levels Thursday.

The global butadiene market has spiked considerably since early March, where tight supply in the US Gulf Coast and Europe has supported a series of steep price increases. 

According to market sources spot trade has recently been done in Europe as high as $4,900/mt FOB NWE, with the majority of producers currently offering limited spot product at $5,000/mt or above.

Many sources are now of the view that current prices are the peak of market, which has climbed by $3,090/mt in spot terms and Eur1,160/mt ($1,680/mt) in the contract market over 2011 to date. 



This has mainly been fueled by a shortage of butadiene feedstock crude C4 and subsequently finished butadiene in the US Gulf Coast. Cracker economics in the US support the use of ethane as a feedstock, which in turn yields a lower level of crude C4.

One consumer believed that the market was set to fall, however, citing several negative factors including improved European supply and demand erosion as a result of the price spike.

The consumer said that supply in Europe had improved -- a view supported by the appearance of more producers in the spot market. 

"The spot market has become much longer. I'm being offered spot product from all European producers now," the consumer said.

There have also been reports in the market of European consumers being offered a discounted spot price compared to traders looking to buy for export, something that was not seen in the market in March, April and May, when supply in Europe was at its tightest. 

One source said that although many sellers have continued to look for $5,000/mt FOB, there had been "some proposals below $4,600/mt." 

Demand in Europe is also said to be falling as certain downstream sectors have struggled to absorb the sharp rise in butadiene prices. 

One producer acknowledged this situation and said: "There has been some fall in demand, but I think it is still marginal and we haven't seen a fall in contract nominations. Some segments like latex or acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene have reduced buying." 

Buyers added that domestic demand was likely to reduce in some sectors -- styrene-butadiene-rubber and nylons -- going forward, because of problems further downstream, where consumer buying has slowed down. 

One consumer said: "As a buyer, we can see that demand will drop. Whether that comes in July, August or September I don't know. But for Q4 we will definitely see a dip in demand."

As spot levels were poised to hit $5,000/mt for incremental European tonnes, sources also believed this would discourage buyers. Something that had previously not been the case according to consumers and traders.

A trader said: "People are becoming more careful now. We've reached a level on spot where it stops making sense to buy incremental tonnes. You're better off just not doing it."

The trader continued: "There is a sentiment now that says prices have to fall. There is no longer the feeling that if you don't buy today, prices will be higher tomorrow. August should be weaker."

One source needing to buy July spot volume said that the current offer levels had led to "a lot of discussion going on internally". The source continued: "Any product we buy now, will go into finished products for sale in September [where downstream demand is expected to be lower.]" 

In addition to an apparent slowdown in domestic buying, sources also questioned whether the demand from the US Gulf Coast for imports from Europe would remain.

According to one trader there was "still interest in volume in the US, but price-wise its more difficult to work." 

A second trader elaborated on this and said: "At present, we don't see people willing to pay 240 cents/pound in the US, which would justify $5,000/mt.

"It's still very dangerous to export to the US, because at these prices we could see big percentage falls in price. If we buy 1,000 mt at $5,000/mt in Europe and can only sell at $4,600/mt, that's a $400,000/mt loss. There are few traders who can absorb that."

Others believed that following a consistent flow of product over the year, plus improved potential supply from Asia to the region demand in the US was getting satisfied. One source even believed that when the latest round of imports hit the US in July "the US will be full."

The trader felt however that "economics in the US are for continued cracking of ethane, which should mean that the market there stays very tight." He added that this should maintain some "need for product" in the Gulf coast.

On the production side in Europe although the market was seen as less tight than the US, there were still concerns over domestic supply of both butadiene and feedstock crude C4. 

Producers added that supply could tighten further over the summer as cracker rates have been reduced because of low demand in the polyethylene sector. The preference for cracking LPG's such as butane over summer would also restrict crude C4 yields sources acknowledged.

--David Potter, david_potter@platts.com 

Saturday, July 02, 2011

HDPE Prices, LDPE prices, LLDPE prices

New York (Platts)--29Jun2011/441 pm EDT/2041 GMT

US polyethylene prices were set to decrease in June, with the only question being how much, industry sources said Monday.

ExxonMobil announced it would decrease the price for its June shipments HDPE resins by 2 cents/lb, while LDPE, LLLDPE are to be down 4 cents/lb, according to a company letter obtained by Platts.

ExxonMobil's announcement was seen as setting the stage for further negotiations, sources said, instead of the final word on contracts.

"I've heard a few companies will follow ExxonMobil," a supplier said.

Buyers, however, likely will seek a further decrease.

"This is just the beginning (of negotiations)," a buyer said.

Domestic prices have risen roughly 11 cents/lb from the beginning of 2011, and producers were trying to raise prices another 5 cents/lb in June. But with global demand slow, US PE makers are being forced to decrease prices.

"My buyers haven't bought anything in June," a distributor said.

The decrease in PE came at the same time spot ethylene prices have begun a steep decline. Spot ethylene is down 10 cents/lb ($220/mt) from a week ago to 53.75 cents/lb FD USG.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

paper prices

Caustic soda prices

US petrochemical producer Dow Chemical has raised its caustic soda 50%-solution contracts by $25/st for diaphragm grade and by $35/st for membrane-grade product, the company said Monday in a letter to customers.

The increases were effective immediately or as contract terms allowed, the letter said.
Dow said the hikes were in response to continued tight supply and strong demand. The company also said its order control program based on 100% allocation remains in effect.

The US caustic soda export market pot values have remained stable in the mid-$400/mt FOB USG since March, despite production issues and pressure from producers to increase prices.

Corn prices

Fish Meal prices

DAP prices

rice prices

tea prices

palm oil prices

cotton prices, wool prices


By James Thompson
Monday, 27 June 2011
The era of cheap clothing on the high street is probably over, as soaring demand from emerging markets keeps the price of natural fibres stubbornly high, a body representing the US cotton industry has warned.
The comments from Cotton Council International came as the price of cotton jumped 13 per cent to $1.65 (£1.03) a pound in New York trading last week, largely driven by fears over a disastrous recent harvest in the southern states of the US.
While cotton prices are below the 140-year peak of $2.20 a pound they hit on 7 March, they remain more than double last year's prices and were blamed for a sharp fall in profits at the Swedish fashion giant H&M last week.
Allen Terhaar, an executive director at Cotton Council International, which promotes the National Cotton Council of America, said: "Will we continue to see deflation in apparel and home furnishings prices? Probably not. The consumer should not expect to depend on deflation in clothing as we have seen for many years."
He described growing demand for clothes from the burgeoning middle classes in countries such as China, India and Brazil as "very important" in the long-term upward trend for prices.
Mr Terhaar said: "The real generators of added demand are the emerging markets. Between now and 2025, we will have 20 million tonnes of added fibre demand, of which the US is expected to add just 0.5 million tonnes – whereas China and India are expected to add 14 to 15 million tonnes combined. This is through the combination of population and economic growth."
Rising supply chain costs and floods in countries such as Pakistan and Australia have also put pressure on prices.
And its not just cotton. The rocketing price of wool is compounding retailers' problems. The floods in Queensland earlier this year have contributed to the wholesale price of wool in Australia, the world's biggest producer, more than doubling this month to nearly $15 a kilogram.
However, it is the news on cotton prices rising again that will probably alarm UK retailers the most, as many thought prices would ease later this year. Lord Wolfson, the chief executive of the fashion retailer Next, brought the subject to the attention of the UK public last September when he warned that clothing prices were likely to rise by as much as 8 per cent for this year's spring and summer ranges.
A fresh reason for the uptick in cotton prices is the recent bad weather in the US, which supplies about 40 per cent of the world's trade in cotton. In the southern states, severe floods near the Mississippi River in May were followed by a drought in Texas in June.
Mr Terhaar said: "In Texas, it has been the worst drought in 100 years. Despite a 12 per cent increase in cotton acreage [in the US], production is likely to be down." A US Department of Agriculture report due for release on 30 June is likely to show a larger-than-expected drop in cotton acreage.
H&M blamed its 18 per cent fall in pre-tax profit for the three months to 31 May on higher cotton prices and wage inflation in Asia.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

steel billet prices


LONDON, June 24 (Reuters) - Black Sea billet prices fell this week and are expected to fall further as demand shrinks on concerns about the health of the global economy and as tighter credit conditions cut investment in construction, a key billet consuming sector.
Traders quoted Black Sea billet offers at $640-660 a tonne free-on-board (fob) Russia and Ukraine, compared with $660-675 last week.

Paper prices, newsprint prices, kraftliner prices, copy paper prices, testliner prices, medium prices


Thursday, June 23, 2011

ETHYLENE PRICES

Asian ethylene started to show signs of rebounding Wednesday as end-users in Southeast Asia returned slowly to the market, sources said.

Last week, the CFR Northeast Asia price benchmark fell $44/mt from Monday to be assessed at $1,096/mt Friday, while the CFR Southeast Asia price fell $60/mt over the same period to $1,081/mt.

Both remained unchanged at this price over Monday and Tuesday this week. But Wednesday, the CFR SEA price rose $18/mt day on day to be assessed at $1,099/mt, while the CFR NEA price again remained flat at $1,096/mt.

Some market sources said end-users in SEA were slowly returning to the market, with some seeking spot cargoes for late July arrival to cover the production shortfall of Shell Chemicals' steam cracker shutdown in August.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

caustic soda prices

Houston (Platts)--9Jun2011/342 pm EDT/1942 GMT

Despite strong appetite from Asian and South American markets, global caustic prices in June are expected to remain pegged in the $450-480/mt levels as demand in Europe and the United States has softened, market sources told Platts this week.

Asian caustic soda tightness was said to be due to supply constraints from Taiwan's Formosa Plastics and limited production and power outages in China and Japan.

In Taiwan, Formosa restarted its 1.09 million mt/year caustic soda plant in Mailiao, Taiwan on June 1, after declaring force majeure (FM) on caustic soda supplies on May 12 due to a fire at an LPG unit. Despite the restart last week, Formosa has kept the FM in place this week due to low inventories.

In China, concerns prevailed as many coastal and some inland provinces were facing power shortages, with reports suggesting that this could likely worsen during the summer.

Meanwhile in the US, producers continued to push for a $50 increase on July contracts. The increase was originally posted for June.

DAP prices

9 June 2011
US DAP prices rise to $614-615 fob for export.
Prices for DAP in the US barge market jump to $560-580 ston fob NOLA.

urea prices

Brazilian prilled urea prices rise to $517 cfr, granular trades at $545.
Yuzhnyy urea trades at $500 and then $515.
Egyptian granular urea sells at close to $550 fob.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

steel billet prices, rebar prices

Black Sea region billet at $660-675 a tonne fob

* Ramadan, summer heat slow down construction

* Turkish rebar prices fall to $725-735 per tonne fob

By Silvia Antonioli

LONDON, June 20 (Reuters) - Black Sea region billet offer prices were little changed this week but interest from buyers dropped ahead of Ramadan which will slow down construction activity in key import areas.

Traders quoted Black Sea billet offers at $660-675 a tonne free-on-board (fob) Russia and Ukraine, a similar level compared to last week but interest from buyers at this price levels was much weaker than earlier this month.

"Nobody is willing to pay more than $650 fob for Ukrainian material," said a source at a Turkish steel mill. "With Ramadan in August consumption will go down so nobody is willing to buy anything unless it is delivered after Ramadan."

titanium dioxide prices

EI DuPont de Nemours & Co. (DD - Analyst Report) has announced price increases for all DuPont TiPure titanium dioxide (TiO2) grades sold in North America (United States and Canada) by $0.25 per pound, effective July 1, 2011.

PE prices, PP prices, LDPE prices, LLDPE prices, HDPE prices

Houston (Platts)--14Jun2011/613 pm EDT/2213 GMT

Aggressive Asian polyethylene and polypropylene offers going to Brazil in June could make Braskem rethink resin offer prices for July, industry sources said Tuesday.

In the beginning of the month Brazil's Braskem said its polyethylene and polypropylene offers for June facing a roll over in prices that were happing since May.

"If China does not come back to the market as a buyer and Asia continues to offer in low levels we have to study the offer prices for the Brazilian domestic market for July," a company source said.


Braskem's June polyethylene for the domestic market were heard at Reals 4,700/mt FOT (with pis/coffins) for LDPE film, Reals 4,350/mt FOT for HDPE blowmolding and at Reals 4,400/mt FOT for HDPE injection and film.

June Asian offers to Brazil were Reals 700-800/mt lower at $1,700/mt FOB (Reals 4,000/mt with all the taxes and freight to the port), $1,450/mt FOB for HDPE blowmolding (Reals 3,250/mt), $1,390/mt FOB for LLDPE butene (Reals 3,350/mt with all the taxes and freight).

Delivery time from Asia to Brazil was 45 days.

"We have heard Asia was starting to react as a buyer this week and so if that happen their offers could go up as well for the next month. Right now there is uncertainty in the market," added the source.

A trader in Brazil said the imports were going well with Asia this month.

"US offers were still very expensive and Asia has the best polyethylene offers in the market now," said the source.

Deal prices between Brazil and Asia in the first week of June were pegged at $1,535/mt CFR for LLDPE butene (Reals 4,180/mt with all the taxes), $1,520/mt CFR for HDPE film (Reals 4,150/mt with all the taxes).

June US offers to Brazil were at least $250/mt more comparing to the Asia levels at $1,800/mt CFR for HDPE film and at $1,700/mt CFR for HDPE blowmolding and injection.

--Paulene Camargo, paulene_camargo@platts.com

PVC prices

Tokyo (Platts)--20Jun2011/318 am EDT/718 GMT

The Asian PVC market is seen to be free fall this week despite limited availability of Asia-origin cargoes as the market was pressured by aggressive offers from the US and Europe, market sources said Monday.

As of Monday, the CFR China PVC price was hovering at around $1,149/mt, down $50/mt, or 4%, from Wednesday. The CFR India PVC price was also hovering at levels similar to the CFR China value. Market sources said the prices would likely fall further this week as aggressive offers for deepsea material would continue. Platts assesses the CFR China/India PVC price benchmark every Wednesday.

Market participants were surprised by the $50/mt price decline, as previously, the Asian PVC market was seen to be supported by limited availability of Asia-origin cargoes, especially from Taiwan. Spot PVC offers from Taiwan dried up as Formosa Plastics -- one of the largest PVC exporter in Asia -- has been out of the spot market due to low PVC plant operations amid a feedstock shortage.

The bearish sentiment in the Asian PVC market accelerated this week as US origin PVC cargoes were reported to have been offered at $1,100/mt CFR China main ports for late July arrival, around $70-80/mt lower than offer levels in the previous week. Europe-origin PVC was mainly offered to India at $1,120/mt CFR India, around $20/mt lower than late last week.

"The market seems to be falling much faster than expected. US and European producers are just trying to sell off at whatever prices," in order to reduce their high inventories, said a trader.

Deepsea offers turned aggressive Monday following the sharp plunge in upstream energy futures. Overnight Friday, NYMEX July crude futures settled $1.94 lower at $93.01/barrel, extending losses seen earlier in the week as US economic woes and concerns over Greek debts remained at the forefront, Platts reported earlier.

"What would happen if Formosa [too] was in the market... scary," said another trader.

Meanwhile, market sources predicted that Asian PVC would likely be at $1,050/mt CFR China in early July. --Fumiko Dobashi, fumiko_dobashi@platts.com

Monday, June 13, 2011

steel billet prices, copper prices, aluminium prices

Tin business was seen down to $24,650 per tonne when stops were triggered below $25,000 - the market had closed at $25,400 on Friday and has now fallen $8,950 or 27 percent from April's all-time highs of $33,600.

Bearish sentiment was compounded by rising inventories - up 155 tonnes at 22,230 tonnes, with the stockpile just 185 tonnes below its highest since April 2010.

Copper, which slipped back below the $9,000 on Friday, extended losses and flopped to $8,871, down $67 and near its lowest since May 25.

Warehouse stocks recorded a rare decrease, falling a net 2,175 tonnes from what were one-year highs to 475,750 tonnes. But cancelled warrants - the metal booked for removal - fell seven percent to 18,775 tonnes.

The supportive prop last week - industrial action at Chile's El Teniente mine - has also been removed, with operations normalised over the weekend, traders noted.

Aluminium business at $2,596 was down $25 and around the cheapest since May 27. Stocks declined for the 13th successive day - down 9,000 tonnes at 4,636,925 tonnes.

Elsewhere, lead eased to $2,505, a $40 loss. There was a 375-tonne fall in stocks to 321,825 tonnes but cancelled warrants fell 20 percent to 1,875 tonnes. Zinc slipped to $2,234, a $26 decline.

Nickel was trading at $22,350, a drop of $500, ignoring a 390-tonne stock fall, which reduced the total stockpile to 112,536 tonnes, a fresh low since August 2009.

Steel billet was quoted at a little-changed $550/557, while there was a 13-percent fall in stocks to 34,385 tonnes, the lowest since July 2010. The 5,200-tonne fall was all from Rotterdam.

In the minors, cobalt was quoted at a steady $35,000/38,000, with stocks falling five tonnes to 276 tonnes.

Molybdenum was stable at $35,000/37,500. Inventories were unchanged at 276 tonnes, but cancelled warrants jumped 36 tonnes to 42 tonnes - all in Rotterdam.

urea prices

LDPE prices, LLDPE prices, HDPE prices, PP prices

Brazilian polyethylene offers to Mercosur (Paraguay, Uruguay and Bolivia) had an offer price reduction of $30-50/mt for June pressured by very competitive Asian prices going to the area.

"It's a readjustment made to be more competitive in the international market," said the source.

LDPE film Brazilian offer had the largest reduction, $50/mt down over May, while HDPE had a $30/mt drop over May.

After the decrease, Brazilian LDPE offers to Paraguay, Uruguay and Bolivia for June were heard around $2,180/mt CFR for film and $1,730/mt CFR for HDPE injection, blowmolding and film at $1,730/mt CFR.

For the LLDPE butene, the company decided to keep offers stable due to the scarcity of the resin in the Latin market.

"We heard Dow's LLDPE plant in Argentina is still not working at full capacity, and US is short on exports as well," added the source.

The June Brazilian LLDPE offer was at $1,750/mt CFR for butene and at $1,770/mt CFR for hexene.

However, even with the reduction, Asian offers to the Mercosur were heard at lower levels, at $1,620/mt CFR for LLDPE butene and at $1,580/mt CFR for HDPE film and at $1,850/mt CFR for LDPE film.

For Argentina, Brazil's polyethylene offers were going to be at the same May levels due to the price control agreement with the country's government.

"We had some offer price readjustment for Argentina during May, but now the offers will be flat over May," said the source.

Brazilian LDPE June offer to Argentina was heard at $2,250/mt CFR while HDPE injection, blowmolding and LLDPE butene at $1,980/mt CFR.

Polypropylene offers to Mercosur were stable because of the high raw material price but with signs to decrease $100/mt for July.

Brazlian PP offers to Paraguay, Uruguay and Bolivia were at $2,050/mt CFR for homo raffia, $2,080/mt CFR for injection and film and at $2,100/mt for co-polymer.

Asian June offers to Mercosur were at $210-230/mt lower at $1,820/mt CFR for homo and at $1,890/mt CFR.

--Paulene Camargo, paulene_camargo@platts.com

Friday, June 03, 2011

butadiene prices

7 May 2011 22:01 [Source: ICIS news]
HOUSTON (ICIS)--US-based tyre producer Goodyear declared force majeure on styrene butadiene rubber (SBR) and other butadiene (BD) derivatives because its supplier is short of the monomer, the company said on Friday.
"While we are working diligently to identify and obtain alternative sources of butadiene monomer supply, at this time we do not know how long the situation will last," the company said in a statement.
BD is a key feedstock for styrene butadiene rubber (SBR), used to make tyres, belts, hoses and numerous other products.
Domestic BD supply is tight because of an ongoing turnaround by one producer that is expected to last until the middle of June.
Other factors are the sales control from another producer following production issues earlier in the year and limited crude C4 exports from Libya in the first quarter. Crude C4 is the feedstock for BD.
The shortage has driven BD spot prices to the $2/lb ($4,409/tonne, €3,130/tonne) mark, while contract nominations for the June BD settlement were $1.50-1.65/lb, according to ICIS.
The run-up in BD values prompted SBR producers to raise May contract prices for 1502 non-oil grade material to $1.55-1.61/lb and is threatening to erode demand, suppliers said.
Major US BD producers include ExxonMobil, LyondellBasell, Shell and TPC Group.
($1 = €0.71)

Benzene prices

Benzene Prices Increase
2011-6-1
Asian benzene price edged up $8/mt to $1134.50/mt FOB Korea Tuesday. Meanwhile, NWE benzene price increased $10/mt to $1200.50/mt FOB Rdam.

Thursday, June 02, 2011

PE prices, PP prices, LDPE prices,

SINGAPORE (ICIS)--India’s spot polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) import prices for June have dropped by 3-5% as compared with May because of weak downstream demand and soft crude futures, market sources said on Tuesday.

Discussions for low-density PE (LDPE), linear low-density PE (LLDPE) and high-density PE (HDPE) are at $1,680-1,740/tonne (€1,176-1,218/tonne) CFR (cost & freight) India Main Port, $1,350-1,380/tonne CFR India Main Port and $1,350-1,370/tonne CFR India Main Port, respectively, according to the sources.

Raffia-grade PP discussions are at $1,640-1,670/tonne CFR India Main Port, while those for block copolymer PP are at $1,700-1,720/tonne CFR India Main Port, they said.

Coffee prices, sugar prices, cocoa prices

Arabica coffee dropped the most in three weeks as favorable weather may aid crops in Brazil, the world’s largest producer and exporter. Sugar and cocoa fell.
Coffee-growing areas in Brazil won’t face the risk of frost in the next 15 days, forecaster Somar Meteorologia said yesterday. Prices have tumbled 17 percent since touching the highest since May 1997 last month amid an improving outlook for global production.
“Prices are under pressure as there are no predictions of a frost in Brazil,” said Boyd Cruel, a senior analyst at Vision Financial Markets in Chicago. “We are also witnessing some technical selling.”
Arabica coffee for July delivery fell 8.65 cents, or 3.3 percent, to settle at $2.5595 a pound at 2 p.m. on ICE Futures U.S. in New York, the biggest drop since May 11. Prices slumped 12 percent last month, the most since June 2009.
The commodity touched $3.089 on May 3, the highest in almost 14 years, as adverse weather threatened crops in Colombia, the second-biggest grower.
Raw-sugar futures for July delivery declined 0.72 cent, or 3.1 percent, to 22.46 cents a pound on ICE, the first loss since May 23.
Cocoa futures for July delivery tumbled $46, or 1.5 percent, to $2,953 a metric ton in New York.
In London, robusta coffee, refined sugar and cocoa retreated.

Wednesday, June 01, 2011

Chip Prices

Taiwanese tech journal DigiTimes published what it claimed were pprices for several upcoming desktop chips from AMD, also on Monday.
The monster in the mix is the $320 FX-8130P, which DigiTimes reported is a Bulldozer-class octo-core CPU. That part, along with the $290 octo-core FX-8130, is reportedly being positioned by AMD to compete with rival Intel's Core i7 2600 and 2600K processors.
Two more Bulldozer-based chips, the $240 six-core FX-6110 and the $220 quad-core FX-4110, stack up against Intel's Core i5 2500 series chips.
DigiTimes also published unconfirmed prices for six Llano-class desktop chips. These include the A8-3550P (quad-core, $170), A8-3550 (quad-core, $150), A6-3450P (quad-core, $130), A6-3450 (quad-core, $110), A4-3350P (dual-core, $80), and E2-3250 (dual-core, $70).

PE prices, PP prices, LDPE prices, LLDPE prices, HDPE prices

SINGAPORE (ICIS)--India’s spot polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) import prices for June have dropped by 3-5% as compared with May because of weak downstream demand and soft crude futures, market sources said on Tuesday.

Discussions for low-density PE (LDPE), linear low-density PE (LLDPE) and high-density PE (HDPE) are at $1,680-1,740/tonne (€1,176-1,218/tonne) CFR (cost & freight) India Main Port, $1,350-1,380/tonne CFR India Main Port and $1,350-1,370/tonne CFR India Main Port, respectively, according to the sources.

Raffia-grade PP discussions are at $1,640-1,670/tonne CFR India Main Port, while those for block copolymer PP are at $1,700-1,720/tonne CFR India Main Port, they said.

PA66 prices, PBT prices

PA6 and PA66 producers have succeeded in implementing substantial price increases during the last three months. PA6 sellers were looking for increases ranging between €300-400/tonne to compensate for an explosion in the cost of benzene, caprolactam and additives while adipic acid, the key PA66 feedstock, has risen by €150/tonne during the first quarter.
In early May, PA6 natural grade at the lower end of the price scale was close to €400/tonne higher and PA66 natural grade material prices were trading around €130/tonne higher compared with early February levels.

kraftliner prices, testliner prices, fluting prices

magazine paper prices, wood free prices, copy paper prices

newsprint prices

Steel Rebar Prices, steel billet prices

Ezz Steel said it raised its steel rebar price by 4.3 per cent to $788.1 per tonne (LE4,650) in June on the back of global rises and the hike in imported input prices of aluminium billet.

The leading market producer said that price would range between LE4,800 and LE4,850 for consumers.

The billet world price attained $665 per ton in May against $625 in April, a rise of 6.01 per cent. Imported scrap also soared 1.6 per cent to $432 per ton in May, according to a monthly report from the Metallurgical Industries Chamber.