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Petrochemicals02-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Click
here to see the latest blog post on
Chemicals & The Economy by Paul Hodges,
which looks at the growing risk of a
Depression, while investors are busy being
distracted with Bitcoin.
Editor’s note: This blog post is an opinion
piece. The views expressed are those of the
author and do not necessarily represent those
of ICIS. Paul Hodges is the chairman of
consultants New
Normal Consulting.
Crude Oil02-Jun-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–South Korea’s petrochemical
shipments declined by 20.8% in May while its
semiconductor exports surged, official data
showed on 1 June.
Petrochemical exports in May fell largely due
to international oil prices falling below
$65/barrel, which caused a fall in
petrochemical unit prices by 13.8% from 1-25
May, South Korea’s Ministry of Trade, Industry
and Energy (MOTIE) said in a statement.
The country’s overall exports fell by 1.3% year
on year to $57.2 billion in May – the first
year-on-year decline since January – while
imports fell by 5.3% year on year to $50.3
billion.
“Exports to both of our key markets – the US
and China – declined, and it appears that US
tariff measures are affecting the global
economy as well as South Korea’s exports,” said
Minister of Trade, Industry and Energy Ahn
Duk-geun.
Semiconductor exports recorded their
second-highest performance of all time as
demand for artificial intelligence (AI)-related
products increased, rising by 21.2% year on
year to $13.8 billion in the month, while
automobile exports fell by 4.4% year on year.
By region, exports to the US, the world’s
largest economy, fell by 8.1% year on year amid
tariffs imposed on the country.
Exports to China, the second largest economy in
the world, fell by 8.4% on drops in
petrochemical and semiconductor shipments.
A broad 10% US tariff has been in effect since
early April, while higher tariffs, including a
25% duty on South Korea, are currently
suspended for 90 days.
However, the US on 31 May threatened to double
steel and aluminium tariffs to 50% from 25%
currently.
In response to the US tariffs, Ahn said South
Korea’s government would work with their US
counterparts on a “mutually beneficial
solution”, while also implementing tariff
response vouchers worth won (W) 84.7 billion
($61.7 billion)
($1 = W1,373.70)
(recasts lead and paragraph 8 for clarity)
Visit the ICIS Topic Page: US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy.
Speciality Chemicals02-Jun-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Here are some of the top
stories from ICIS Europe for the week ended
30 May.
Europe PA market
expected to face continued weak demand;
supply projected to remain balanced to
long
Weakened demand and stable supply in the
Europe phthalic anhydride (PA) market are
expected to continue into June.
Moody’s downgrades
Sasol on weak chems, oil markets
Moody’s has cut its rating for Sasol from
stable to negative on the back of “continued
operating performance deterioration” in the
face of weak chemicals and oil markets, the
agency said on Thursday.
ExxonMobil to sell its
Gravenchon, France refinery to Canada’s North
Atlantic
ExxonMobil is selling its refinery at
Gravenchon, France, to Canadian refining
group North Atlantic.
Clariant rejects fresh
€1 billion damages claim from OMV
Clariant has rejected OMV’s claim for around
€1 billion in damages for competition law
infringement, the Swiss producer announced.

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Crude Oil02-Jun-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–China’s official
manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI)
in May remained below the expansion threshold
of 50.0 but was up from the previous month amid
a pause in the US-China tariff war.
Official PMI contracts for second straight
month
Trade-war pause lifts demand
China Q2 GDP to post 4.9% annualized growth
– UOB
The official purchasing managers’ index (PMI)
of the world’s second-biggest economy inched up
to 49.5 in May from April’s reading of 49.0,
data from the National Bureau of Statistics
(NBS) showed.
A PMI reading above 50 indicates expansion,
while a reading below 50 signals contraction.
Trade tensions between with the US eased in May
following an agreement between the world’s two
biggest economies to
suspend tariffs on each other until August.
China is a major importer of petrochemicals
whose self-sufficiency has been growing over
the years due to strong capacity expansion.
“Some US-related companies reported that
foreign trade orders were restarted at an
accelerated pace, and import and export
conditions improved,” NBS senior statistician
Zhao Qinghe said.
The official manufacturing PMI surveys large
state-owned enterprises.
Both production and demand in May improved
compared with the previous month’s, indicating
an acceleration in both manufacturing and new
orders, according to the NBS.
Production index rose to 50.7 in May from 49.8
in the previous month, while new orders index
inched up to 49.8 from 49.2 over the same
period.
Production of equipment, high-tech and consumer
goods improved, registering readings above 50.
China’s non-manufacturing PMI, comprising
services and construction, eased to 50.3 in May
from 50.4 in April, nudging up the composite
PMI (which includes the improved reading for
manufacturing) to 50.4 compared with the
previous month’s 50.2.
OUTLOOK
In a research note on Monday, economists at
Singapore-based UOB Global Markets &
Research said the trade truce would provide
“some near-term support for [GDP] growth”,
which is projected at 4.9% for Q2.
However, UOB added that the growth pace would
slow to 4.2% year on year in the second half of
the year amid continued uncertainty over
ongoing trade discussions between the US and
China, as well as where the tariff rates will
land eventually.
“China’s stimulus will lend further support to
stabilize its outlook,” said UOB.
Focus article by Jonathan
Yee
Visit the ICIS Topic Page: US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy.
Thumbnail image: At a port in Qingdao City
in Shandong, east China on 27 May 2025.
(Shutterstock)
Ethylene02-Jun-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Japan’s manufacturing
purchasing managers’ index (PMI) continued to
contract in May, with a reading below 50 for
the 11th consecutive month.
The May number at 49.4, however, inched up from
48.7 in the previous month as downturn in new
orders eased, au Jibun Bank said on Monday.
A PMI reading above 50 indicates expansion,
while a lower number denotes contraction.
“Business conditions faced by Japanese
manufacturers deteriorated at the softest pace
in 2025 so far in May,” the bank said in a
statement.
Operating conditions for investment goods
makers in Japan improved in May, while
conditions deteriorated at a softer pace across
the intermediate goods segment.
A softer decline in overall new work received
by Japanese manufacturers in May contributed to
the improved index.
Total new business fell modestly, generally
linked to subdued demand amid US tariffs and
increased “client hesitancy”.
The decline in new export orders also moderated
since April.
Softer demand conditions led to a further
reduction in factory output across Japan during
May.
The rate of contraction was modest, though it
quickened slightly from April.
Optimism strengthened for the year-ahead
outlook for output, rising from April’s near
five-year low, au Jibun Bank said.
“Growth projections were often supported by
forecasts of firmer global demand conditions
and new product releases,” it said.
However, some firms expressed concerns over US
tariffs, inflation, and a shrinking population.
Manufacturers in Japan signaled another
marginal deterioration in supplier performance
during May.
A number of companies suggested that material
and labor shortages at some vendors had
stretched delivery times.
Average input costs faced by Japanese goods
producers increased at a softer pace in May,
with the rate of inflation the weakest in 14
months.
At the same time, selling price inflation also
eased in May, with charges rising at the
softest rate in nearly four years.
Visit the ICIS Topic Page: US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy.
Thumbnail image: At a port in Tokyo, Japan,
12 May 2025. (FRANCK
ROBICHON/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)
Gas02-Jun-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Here are the top stories
from ICIS News Asia and the Middle East for
the week ended 30 May.
Thailand’s GC deepens
focus on specialties amid overcapacity –
CEO
By Nurluqman Suratman 26-May-25 11:16
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Thailand’s PTT Global
Chemical (GC) is deepening its commitments to
feedstock flexibility, high-value specialty
and bio-based & green chemicals, as CEO
Narongsak Jivakanun urges regional
coordination within ASEAN to tackle global
supply chain disruptions and overcapacity.
INSIGHT: Asia
oxo-alcohols prices expected to face downward
pressure in H2 2025
By Lina Xu 26-May-25 12:00 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Asia’s oxo-alcohols market is
forecast to face significant downward pricing
pressure in the second half of 2025, driven
by rapid capacity expansion in China and an
uncertain recovery in downstream demand.
Asia fatty alcohol
mid-cuts demand to soften as feedstock PKO
declines
By Helen Yan 27-May-25 11:18 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Asia fatty alcohols market may see a
further softening in demand as buyers hold
back their purchases, given the decline in
the feedstock palm kernel oil (PKO) costs in
the past month.
INSIGHT: China’s
polyolefins demand shifts towards domestic
consumption due to export
uncertainty
By Amy Yu 27-May-25 12:00 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–China’s polyolefins demand for 2025
is expected to reach 85 million tonnes, up by
3% year on year, driven by the domestic
market in the face of the uncertain outlook
of China-US trade negotiations.
UPDATE: Japan’s Asahi
Kasei to discontinue MMA, CHMA, PMMA, SB
latex businesses
By Nurluqman Suratman 27-May-25 15:42
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Japanese chemicals major
Asahi Kasei on Tuesday said that it will be
discontinuing its businesses for methyl
methacrylate (MMA) monomer, cyclohexyl
methacrylate (CHMA), polymethyl methacrylate
(PMMA) resin and styrene-butadiene (SB)
latex.
Singapore April
chemicals output down 3.2%; H2 2025 outlook
firm
By Jonathan Yee 27-May-25 15:26 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Singapore’s chemicals production
declined 3.2% year on year in April amid
tariff-led front-loading, official data
showed on 26 May, while a pause in
‘reciprocal’ tariffs could support further
growth in H2 2025.
ASEAN leaders voice
‘deep concerns’ over US tariffs
By Nurluqman Suratman 28-May-25 11:19
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Southeast Asian leaders at
the 46th ASEAN Summit in Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia have voiced “deep concern” over the
US’ recent move to impose unilateral sweeping
tariffs.
INSIGHT: India PVC
imports brace for monsoon dip, but policy
twists could stir the market
By Aswin Kondapally 30-May-25 10:02 MUMBAI
(ICIS)–India’s Polyvinyl chloride (PVC)
imports are expected to moderate in the
coming months due to seasonal patterns, as
monsoon conditions typically dampen demand
from key sectors such as construction and
agriculture.
Polyvinyl Chloride30-May-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Braskem has firmly denied it
was preparing polyethylene (PE) price increases
for June in anticipation of antidumping duties
(ADDs) on US and Canadian imports, with a
spokesperson at the Brazilian petrochemicals
major calling such claims “absolutely
unfounded”.
In a phone interview with ICIS, the
spokesperson also rejected suggestions Braskem
had already communicated potential price rises
for June on expected ADDs.
The spokesperson later confirmed on Friday that
Braskem’s PE prices would roll over in June
from May.
The proposal to implement ADDs on PE was
brought forward in 2024 by Braskem, who is the
sole PE producer in Brazil. The company has had
to grapple with higher production costs than
peers in North America, where natural gas-based
ethane is widely available and has allowed a
revival in polymers manufacturing.
“The idea that we were putting up prices for
May or for June based on a supposed decision
regarding ADDs is absolutely unfounded. Braskem
is not the one who sets the price: as the
market knows, Braskem sets its prices
accordingly to competitive market conditions
rather than predetermined strategies,” said the
spokesperson.
The company’s representative also deemed
necessary to distinguish between general import
duties, which affect all countries importing
into Brazil, and ADDs, which in this case would
only target two countries, if Gecex finally
deems PE from US and Canada contravened free
trade rules.
“For this particular case, it would not be the
case that all imports would be affected – only
the imports that are from the US,” concluded
the spokesperson.
PE imports from the US and Canada represented
in 2024 around 75% of all of Brazil’s PE
imports, according to the ICIS Supply and
Demand Database.
BUSY WEEK ENDS WITH A
ROLLOVERBrazil’s policymakers
and polymers players leave behind a busy week
in which political decisions get mixed with
business planning, irremediably affected by the
low operating rates at most Brazilian and Latin
American chemical plants.
Hit by abundant and lower-priced imports,
Brazil’s chemicals plants operating rates stand
at around 60-65%, according to trade group
Abiquim, which represents producers.
Braskem’s statement on Friday sought to clarify
several points of the many published this week
about Brazil’s trade policy, but
mostly the claim by market players that
Braskem had already decided to increase prices
on expectations of ADDs being imposed on US
material.
It stressed that any future price adjustments
would not be related to antidumping measures,
“because they are not in place”, and argued it
was not aware yet of what way June pricing
would go.
It has been an intense week for trade
policymakers, with the foreign trade committee
Gecex sharply increasing
ADDs on US PVC from 8.2% to 43.7%, despite
the US being only the second largest
supplier to Brazil, well behind Colombia.
Meanwhile, Gecex postponed without explanation
a meeting where it was expected to decide on
imposing ADDs on PE imports from the US and
Canada, planned for 29 May but rescheduled last
minute, leaving Brazil’s PE market in
uncertainty.
Latin America has been one of the most
vulnerable regions hit by the global
petrochemicals oversupply and low prices. As
around half of Brazil and the wider region
chemicals demand is covered by imports, it is
global prices that dictate the domestic pricing
policies – a quintessential ‘price-taker’
status.
After a considerable list of protectionist
measures have been implemented in Brazil, fears
among importers about rising input costs
and overall national inflation rates are
increasing.
Small and large manufacturers up and down the
country, which depend on imports for their
production, will now face higher bills due to
higher import tariffs on several chemicals as
well as several ADDs in place for
petrochemicals.
However, Abiquim has said the measures’
influence on inflation would
be minimal, adding they are sensible when
taking into consideration that they would in
part cushion the nation’s beleaguered chemicals
producers from even lower operating rates or,
in the worst-case scenario, plant closures.
Additional reporting by Bruno
Menini
Gas30-May-2025
Naftogaz expected to ramp up CEE gas
imports
Company scrambling to refill storage as it
compensates for lost production
Grid operators mull balance-of-month
bundled capacity tender for TBP after initial
auction falls through
LONDON (ICIS)–The Ukrainian gas incumbent
Naftogaz is expected to import up to 1 billion
cubic meters (bcm) of gas from central and
eastern European countries in July after
reportedly securing more European funding,
traders told ICIS.
The company said on 30 May it had been in talks
with international lenders including the
European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (EBRD) to secure financial support
to repair and increase local gas production.
However, traders active in Ukraine said the
incumbent may also have snapped up a €400
million credit line that would allow it to buy
between 0.8bcm and 1bcm in July.
Upcoming purchases are likely to be consistent
with the incumbent import strategy since the
beginning of the year.
Naftogaz did not reply to questions by
publication time.
HIGH DEMAND
The company has been scrambling to buy gas on
central European hubs as it ended the storage
season with limited stocks and a large part of
its domestic gas production had been destroyed
following Russian missile attacks earlier this
year.
Traders say Naftogaz would need to import
around 5bcm by the start of the cold season in
November to ensure it reaches a storage target
of just over 13bcm.
At the end of May Ukraine was importing just
over 20 million cubic meters (mcm)/day from
Poland, Hungary and Slovakia, but traders say
offtakes should ramp up to at least 24mcm/day
in June to ensure it secures close to 4bcm by
the end of the injection season.
However, in order to increase imports it needs
access to additional capacity.
NEW BUNDLED CAPACITY TENDER
Ukraine has been in talks with countries in
southeast Europe, including Romania, Moldova,
Bulgaria and Greece to launch a bundled
capacity transmission product for exports of
gas directly from Greece to Ukraine.
The first auction held on 29 May fell through
because companies did not have sufficient time
to prepare.
However, a source at one of the regional gas
grid operators told ICIS they were assessing
the possibility of launching a balance-of-month
product for delivery of gas in the second half
of June, followed by monthly bundled capacity
for the period July–September 2025.
Speciality Chemicals30-May-2025
BARCELONA (ICIS)–As the 12 June deadline for
entries to the ICIS Innovation Awards
approaches, a judge and a 2024 winner describe
why this topic is so important for the future
of the chemical industry and society.
Innovation breaks down silos, encourages
collaboration
Enables industrial value chains to
decarbonize
Chemical industry provides essential raw
materials
Awards are a chance to gain external
recognition for your innovations
Deadline is 12 June, entry is free and
quick –
click here for full details
In this Think Tank podcast, Will
Beacham
interviews Alessia Ielo,
global sustainable solutions manager for
Brenntag Essentials and Ian
Temperton, CEO of Plastic Energy.
Editor’s note: This podcast is an opinion
piece. The views expressed are those of the
presenter and interviewees, and do not
necessarily represent those of ICIS.
ICIS is organising regular updates to help
the industry understand current market trends.
Register here .
Read the latest issue of ICIS
Chemical Business.
Read Paul Hodges and John Richardson’s
ICIS
blogs.
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