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Ethylene05-May-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Mexico remains the potential
largest victim of the change in US trade
policy, but practically no country in the world
would be spared from an impact, analysts said
this week.
Mexico, Brazil GDP growth forecasts cut
Mexico’s manufacturing impacted by US
tariffs on automotive
Latin American high interest rates to fall
faster to prop up economy
US high costs to still deter many
manufacturers to relocate
MEXICAN ISSUESIn a
string of forecasts published by analysts at
credit rating agencies and consultancies,
Mexico was singled out as one of the countries
most affected by US tariffs.
Meanwhile, chemicals sources in Mexico have
recently said demand has taken a turn
for the better, especially after the US
fell short of announcing any additional tariff
on the country.
However, other macroeconomic indicators have
been mixed. On the negative side, the
manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI)
fell further into contraction
in April and added its 10th consecutive
month in the red.
On the other hand, Mexico’s GDP grew by 0.2% in
the first quarter, compared with the first, a
higher-than-expected figure which allows the
country to avoid for the moment a technical
recession – two consecutive quarters with
negative growth.
Mexico and Canada form, together with the US,
the North American free trade zone under USMCA.
Canada was also spared from any additional
tariffs, but the two countries were already
subject to some import tariffs implemented in
February on sectors such as automotive or
steel, among others.
And it is the automotive tariffs, if prolonged
in time in their current form, that could
greatly dent Mexico’s economy, given the
sector’s importance within manufacturing – it
is a large global automotive producer, churning
out nearly 3 million vehicles/year, of which
around 80% are exported to the US.
This week, London-headquartered consultancy
Oxford Economics said it expects Mexico’s GDP
growth to be flat in 2025, which is somewhere
in the middle between the International
Monetary Fund’s (IMF’s) forecast for a
contraction of 0.3% and market consensus, which
still sees some growth of a few tenths of a
percentage point.
“Mexico is the most open economy in the region
with bilateral trade accounting for nearly 80%
of GDP, out of which exports to the US account
for over 25% of GDP. In fact, nearly 80% of all
Mexican exports are directed to the US and
currently face 25% tariffs on non-USMCA
compliant goods on top of steel and aluminium,”
said the analysts at Oxford Economics.
The only Latin American country where
investments are expected to grow in coming
years is Argentina, the analysts added, while
the rest of the region will post a slowdown,
while Mexico will potentially see investments
contracting.
“Uncertainty around the future trade
relationship with the US and the protection
that the USMCA can bring is threatening
billions in US investment,” said Oxford
Economics.
“The scale of this threat is substantial – last
year alone, US investment in Mexico reached $16
billion, accounting for nearly half of the
country’s total foreign direct investment. Even
more concerning, over the last two decades, the
US has invested over $300 billion in Mexico,
creating a massive economic stake now under
threat.”
Analysts at BMI, a subsidiary of US credit
rating agency Fitch, agreed that fixed
investment is to fall sharply this year, a
factor which could tip Mexico’s economy into
recession in 2025.
However, BMI’s report was published before
Mexico’s statistical office Inegi said earlier
this week that GDP growth in the first quarter
stood at 0.2%, quarter on quarter, which is a
weak figure but nonetheless allowed Mexico to
avoid a ‘technical recession’ – two consecutive
quarters with negative growth – for the time
being.
BMI cut its growth forecast for Mexico in 2025
and now expects a contraction in GDP of 0.5%,
sharply lower than its prior forecast for
modest growth of 0.2%.
“The economy was already struggling prior to
the latest shifts in US trade policy, with
output having declined by a significant 0.6%
quarter on quarter in Q4… Granted, it will only
face an effective tariff rate of roughly 7.5%
once all exemptions are accounted for (below
the US’s weighted average rate of closer to
20%),” said the analysts.
“But there is little incentive for firms expand
their presence in Mexico when so much remains
in flux. Combined with spillover effects from a
more downbeat outlook for growth in the
neighboring US (felt via reduced exports and
softness in remittances), the likely trajectory
for the Mexican economy is a challenging one.”
S&P CUTS GDP GROWTH FORECAST –
AGAINTrump’s second term seems
to have brought even more uncertainty than the
first, and analysts these days say their
forecasts could be futile and valid only for a
matter of hours.
It is what US credit rating agency S&P said
this week, as it downgraded GDP growth
forecasts for Latin America’s two largest
economies – Brazil and Mexico – as well as the
world’s, including the US itself.
“Our baseline forecasts carry a significant
amount of uncertainty. As situations evolve, we
will gauge the macro and credit materiality of
potential and actual policy shifts and reassess
our guidance accordingly,” it began.
To make their point clear, they added a note
after detailing what tariff scenario they
consider likely to stay in the medium term
which read: “A note of caution about our latest
revisions: we are in uncharted territory.”
S&P latest revisions assume the following:
A 10% across-the-board tariff on imports
from all US trading partners as announced on 2
April, but not the country-specific tariffs now
on a 90-day pause.
A 25% US import tariff on autos, steel,
aluminium, pharmaceuticals and semiconductors.
The revisions include the “fully escalated
tariffs” between the US (145% on Chinese
imports) and China (125% on US imports), net of
the carve-out for electronics imports into the
US.
The results of this are likely to cause a more
pronounced economic slowdown across the board.
GDP forecasts by S&P
(change in %)
2025
Change from March
forecast
2026
Change from March
forecast
2027
Change from March
forecast
2028
Change from March
forecast
Brazil
1.8
-0.1
1.7
-0.3
2.1
0.0
2.2
0.0
Mexico
-0.2
-0.4
1.5
-0.2
2.2
0.0
2.3
0.0
US
1.5
-0.5
1.7
-0.2
2.1
-0.1
1.9
0.1
Canada
1.4
-0.3
1.5
-0.4
2.1
0.0
2.1
0.3
World
2.7
-0.3
2.6
-0.4
3.3
-0.1
3.3
0.0
The rest of Latin America will fare slightly
better, when compared with Mexico’s outlook,
not least because most countries in the region
are likely to face a 10% tariff if no deal with
the US is reached.
Brazil’s economy, in any case, was widely
expected to slow down after three years of
bumper growth which led to widely extended
fears by the end of 2024 of economic
overheating.
Further afield, forecast revisions have been
less severe for most countries than for the
global economy at large.
BMI said Peru, Chile and Colombia are expected
to maintain “relatively healthy and stable
growth rates” with three countries, as well as
Brazil, having a significantly lower dependence
than Mexico on exports to the US, which could
insulate them somewhat from direct trade war
impacts.
Argentina will be the exception as the country
makes an attempt at an economic spring after
years in the doldrums and a deep recession in
2023-2024.
Overall and for the region, the current crisis
could have at least one silver lining: as
growth slows down, central banks will be keener
to lower still-high interest rates to prop
consumption.
Rates across the region remain above historical
average, even if the inflation crisis has
subsided in most economies. Brazil’s rates
currently stand at 14.25%, Mexico’s at 9.0%,
Colombia’s at 9.25%, while Chile’s have come
down considerably and stand at 5.0%.
Still a long way from economic normalization,
Argentina’s interest rates stand at 29%, in
response to an inflation which still stood
at 56% in March.
“Central banks in Latin America are likely to
cut more aggressively given that their current
policy rates are above neutral. The recent
appreciation of EM currencies against the US
dollar leaves central banks with more scope to
cut rates across the countries we cover,” said
S&P.
The analysts added that the combination of
stronger currencies in emerging markets – Latin
American economies fall under that category –
and lower oil prices will help decrease
inflation, given most of those economies are
net importers of energy.
A FINAL
REFLECTIONS&P concluded
saying that no matter how much President Trump
would like to bring as much manufacturing back
to the US as possible, current global trade and
industrial trends make that scenario very
unlikely.
This could stem from Trump’s fixation on
manufactured goods, without taking into account
the trade balance in services, which mostly and
largely favors the US in most cases, or the
difference between savings by US consumers and
companies and investment.
S&P said US tariffs – in full or in part –
are unlikely to substantially narrow the US
trade balance, because its current account
deficit will only narrow to the extent that the
savings-investment difference narrows, and that
would require some combination of lower
investment (and slower growth) and higher
savings (and less consumption).
“If the tariffs do not materially move the US
savings rate, then they will simply shift the
trade balance between partners as exports minus
imports remain unchanged. It’s also hard to see
the US tariffs causing a wholesale return or
reshoring of US manufacturing. Decades of trade
driven largely by comparative advantage means
that production is currently located where it
is most cost-effective.”
Taking the case of Asian supply chains, the
cost of production there is often only a
fraction of the cost of producing the same
product in the US, or Europe; the currently
proposed tariff rates are unlikely to close
that gap.
“To put it another way, relocating a large
swath of goods back to the US would likely
involve a substantial increase in costs,” the
analysts at S&P concluded.
Front page picture source: Mexico’s
automotive trade group the Asociacion
Mexicana de la Industria Automotriz
(AMIA)
Insight by Jonathan Lopez
Speciality Chemicals05-May-2025
SAO PAULO (ICIS)–Here are some of the
stories from ICIS Latin America for the
fortnight ended on 2 May.
NEWSBrazil chems
production still impacted by imports despite
protectionist measures –
Abiquim
Brazil’s chemicals production structural
woes, such as high production costs, remain
while imports continue making their way
unabated, despite protectionist measures
deployed by the government, according to the
director general at producers’ trade group
Abiquim.
INSIGHT: Mexico’s
chemicals revive as tariffs woes ease (part
1)When Donald Trump won
the US election with a larger-than-expected
majority, Mexican chemicals players started
making plans for their businesses under what
promised to be a disruptive second term for
trade relations between the two countries.
Argentina savoring
economic spring but recovery for all biggest
task still pending – Evonik
execAfter years in the
doldrums, Argentina’s economy is finally
going through some sort of “spring” thanks to
sectors such as agricultural, mining and
energy – but the country, however, is yet to
achieve a recovery which works for all
Argentinians, an executive at Germany’s
chemicals major Evonik said.
Mexico’s improved
fortunes on US tariffs propping up petchems
demand – Entec
execMexico’s chemicals
fortunes seem to be turning for the better
after the country was spared from the most
punitive US’ import taxes, according to an
executive at chemicals distributor major
Ravago’s Mexican subsidiary.
INSIGHT: Argentina
faces up to rising inflation after currency
controls liftedArgentina’s
decision to end foreign currency restrictions
is set to devalue the peso’s official
exchange rate and increase inflation but it
was a vital step to normalizing a
dysfunctional exchange rate system.
Mexico launches
antidumping investigation into US PVC
importsThe Mexican
government officially launched an antidumping
investigation into imports of suspension
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) resin from the US,
following allegations of unfair trade
practices that have impacted domestic
industry at the end of April.
Brazil’s Braskem Q1
higher priced PE, PP sales in Q1 cannot
offset lower PVC
volumesBraskem resin sales
in its domestic market dropped by 4% in Q1,
year on year, due to lower polyethylene (PE)
and polypropylene (PP) sales volumes as the
producer prioritized sales with higher added
value, the Brazilian polymers major said.
Mexico’s Orbia earnings
fall again while ‘trying’ to guess potential
green shoots – CEOOrbia’s
Q1 sales and earnings fell again, year on
year, with the Mexican chemicals producer
already writing off any significant recovery
in 2025 and “trying to figure out” potential
green shoots for 2026, its CEO said on
Friday.
PRICINGLatAm PE international
prices steady to lower on competitive US
export pricesInternational
polyethylene (PE) prices were assessed as
steady to lower as US export prices remain
competitive.
LatAm PP domestic,
international prices fall in Colombia, Mexico
on cheaper
feedstocksDomestic and
international polypropylene (PP) prices fell
in Colombia and Mexico tracking lower US
propylene costs. In other Latin American
(LatAm) countries, prices were unchanged.
LatAm –
Argentina PP domestic price range narrows as
distributors try to compete with cheaper
imports
Domestic polypropylene (PP) price range was
assessed as narrower in Argentina.
Distributors’ prices have fallen to compete
with cheaper imports.
Ethylene05-May-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Here are the top stories from
ICIS News from the week ended 2 May.
China unofficial proposed tariff
exemption list includes US PE, ethane but not
EG
China’s unofficial proposed tariff exemption
list of 131 US products worth around $46
billion, or 28% of total imports, includes
polyethylene (PE), along with other chemicals
and key feedstock ethane, according to a
document obtained by ICIS.
US PPG’s order patterns remain steady
despite tariffs
US based paints and coatings producer PPG has
so far seen no changes in order patterns from
its customers, and it has maintained its
full-year guidance despite the tariffs
imposed by the US.
INSIGHT: US suppliers maintain
propane exports despite
tariffs
China’s tariffs on US shipments of liquefied
petroleum gas (LPG) have yet to disrupt
exports, and the companies that supply the
material expect that will remain the case –
even if prices fall.
INSIGHT: CEOs face new problem as
economy weakens, overcapacity
worsens
As the trade war puts a squeeze on already
tepid economic growth, and deepens chromic
global overcapacity in chemicals, CEOs may
struggle to find fresh markets as they shift
product flows to avoid the burden and
uncertainty of tariffs.
INSIGHT: Mexico renews nearshoring
ambitions as tariffs woes
ease
As Mexico seems to have managed to navigate
US President Donald Trump’s first 100 days in
office relatively unscathed, compared
with other emerging, manufacturing hub
emerging economies, the country now looks
again at its potential as a nearshoring hub.
US tariffs may create COVID-like
whiplash on chem markets –
Huntsman
The shock of US tariffs has caused customers
to halt chemical purchases due to the
uncertain trade policy, and that pause is
reverberating throughout chemical chains in
ways that resemble the COVID-19 pandemic in
2020, the CEO of US-based polyurethanes
producer Huntsman said on Friday.

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Caustic Soda05-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Saudi Arabia’s Basic Chemical
Industries (BCI) has extended its Memorandum of
Understanding (MoU) with Italmatch’s Middle
East unit to supply chemicals to Italmatch’s
facilities in the PlasChem Park in Jubail
Industrial City.
The MoU, first signed in May 2023, was extended
to 31 Dec 2025, BCI said in a filing on the
Saudi bourse Tadawul on 4 May.
Italy-based Italmatch has extended the timeline
on increased scope and additional technical
work to modify product processes to match the
local market, it added.
The deal involves the supply of chlorine,
caustic soda and hydrochloric acid to
Italmatch’s facilities.
Financial details of the deal were not
disclosed.
Saudi Arabia’s BCI manufactures chlorine gas,
hydrochloric acid, caustic soda, and sodium
hypochlorite at a site near Dammam, according
to the company’s website.
Speciality Chemicals05-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Here are some of the top
stories from ICIS Europe for the week ended 2
May.
Europe PE, PP spot
pricing stable to soft as softer May
anticipatedEuropean
polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) spot
pricing is stable to soft following the
unpredictable trade wars at the beginning of
the month. Players are universally expecting
a softer month in May.
Spanish refineries,
chemicals restart after nationwide power
outageRefineries and
chemical sites in Spain have taken their
first steps towards restarting operations
following Monday’s nationwide power outage
which forced widespread shutdowns.
European phenol/acetone
market reacts with surprise to Orlen closure
newsThe European phenol
and acetone market has reacted with surprise
to the news that Orlen is to
decommission its phenol and acetone
plant in Plock, Poland, by the end
of this year.
Europe acrylic acid
contract prices fall in April as feedstock
costs subsideThe Europe
acrylic acid (AA) market has seen the freely
negotiated contract prices for April settle
at a slight decrease.
INSIGHT: CEOs face new
problem as economy weakens, overcapacity
worsensAs the trade war
puts a squeeze on already tepid economic
growth, and deepens chromic global
overcapacity in chemicals, CEOs may struggle
to find fresh markets as they shift product
flows to avoid the burden and uncertainty of
tariffs.
Crude Oil05-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The ASEAN+3 region,
comprising the 10 ASEAN (Association of
Southeast Asian Nations) ASEAN nations plus
China, Japan, and South Korea, is projected to
achieve a stable economic growth rate of 4.3%
in 2025, from a 4.4% expansion in 2024,
according to a joint statement on Monday.
The 28th ASEAN+3 Finance Ministers’ and Central
Bank Governors’ Meeting co-chaired by Malaysia
and China and held in Milan, Italy on 4 May,
focused on strategies to bolster regional
financial stability and cooperation amid
economic headwinds.
ASEAN comprises 10 countries from southeast
Asia, namely, Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Singapore, Philippines, Laos,
Cambodia, Brunei and Myanmar.
“Over the medium term, ASEAN+3 is expected to
remain a key driver of the global economy,
contributing to more than 40% of global
growth,” they said.
Inflation, meanwhile, is expected to remain
below 2.0% this year.
The region will look at carefully recalibrating
monetary policy based on domestic conditions,
as well as maintain exchange rate flexibility
as a buffer against external shocks.
It also added that the regions reaffirms its
“full commitment to multilateralism, and a
rules-based, non-discriminatory, free, fair,
open, inclusive, equitable, and transparent
multilateral trading system, with the World
Trade Organization (WTO) at its core”.
The US and China are locked in a trade war,
with both nations slapping tariffs in excess of
100% on each other.
Methanol05-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–SABIC swung to a net loss of
Saudi riyal (SR) 1.21 billion ($323 million) in
the first quarter on the back of higher
feedstock prices and operating costs, the Saudi
Arabian chemicals giant said on 4 May.
in Saudi Riyal (SR)
billion
Q1 2025
Q1 2024
% Change
Sales
34.59
32.69
5.8
EBITDA
2.5
4.51
-44.6
Net income
-1.21
0.25
The company reported a Q1 revenue increase
driven by higher sales volumes, though this
gain was partially tempered by lower average
selling prices, it said in a filing on the
Saudi bourse, Tadawul.
Despite this revenue growth, Q1 net profit
faced pressure from a rise in other operating
expenses, primarily due to a one-time SR 1.07
billion cost associated with a strategic
restructuring expected to yield future cost
reductions.
QUARTER ON QUARTER
PERFORMANCESABIC’s sales volume
and average selling prices were relatively
stable quarter over quarter, supported by
higher production volumes in the chemicals and
polymers units, although this was offset by
lower overall sales volumes.
In the first quarter, revenue of the
petrochemicals segment was at SR31.5 billion,
representing a quarter-over-quarter decrease of
1%, primarily driven by continued oversupply
and weaker demand.
While methanol prices improved, monoethylene
glycol (MEG) prices were flat amid higher
supply and weak demand, along with
polypropylene (PP).
Meanwhile, polyethylene (PE) prices were
supported by global demand, but offset by
additional supply.
Polycarbonate (PC) prices were lower in the
first quarter, mainly due to weak demand across
major markets and oversupply.
OUTLOOK
Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index (PMI)
growth remained slow over the quarter,
indicating business pessimism, SABIC CEO
Abdulrahman Al-Fageeh said.
“Our growth projects are progressing according
to plan, including the Petrokemya MTBE plant
and
SABIC Fujian complex,” Al-Fageeh said.
“We are focused on driving operational
excellence, advancing transformation, and
pursuing selective growth, while maintaining
financial discipline and delivering long-term
value,” added Al-Fageeh.
SABIC projects an expenditure range of $3.5-4.0
billion for the year.
SABIC is 70%-owned by energy giant Saudi
Aramco.
Thumbnail shows a SABIC production facility
(Source: SABIC)
($1 = SR3.75)
Crude Oil05-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The People’s Action Party
(PAP) won a supermajority in Singapore’s
parliament in what was Prime Minister Lawrence
Wong’s first election as leader.
The PAP captured 87 of 97 seats in a general
election held on 3 May, including five
uncontested seats, official final results
showed early Sunday.
The Workers’ Party, the leading opposition,
held its ground with 10 seats across three
constituencies but failed to expand its
parliamentary foothold.
Wong, who assumed the premiership last year in
Singapore’s first leadership shift in two
decades, now holds a “strong mandate” to lead
the nation for the next five years, he said on
4 May.
Singapore is a leading petrochemical
manufacturer and exporter in southeast Asia,
with more than 100 international chemical
companies, including ExxonMobil, based at its
Jurong Island hub.
Gas05-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–Here are the top stories
from ICIS News Asia and the Middle East for
the week ended 2 May.
India RIL
oil-to-chemicals fiscal Q4 earnings fall on
poorer margins
By Nurluqman Suratman 28-Apr-25 11:57
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–India’s Reliance Industries
Limited (RIL) late on 25 April reported a 10%
year-on-year drop in its oil-to-chemicals
(O2C) earnings before interest, tax,
depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) on
poorer transportation fuel cracks and subdued
downstream chemical deltas.
Asia naphtha market
strengthens but uncertainties
linger
By Li Peng Seng 28-Apr-25 15:01 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Asia’s naphtha intermonth spread hit
a three-week high recently as market
sentiment recovered following stronger demand
from China, but the market ahead could be
choppy on the back of volatile crude oil and
trade war uncertainties.
PODCAST: MMA market
turmoil in China and Asia amid rising supply,
weak demand
By Yi Liang 28-Apr-25 15:19 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–In this podcast, ICIS analysts
Jasmine Khoo and Mason Liang will talk about
the current situation and outlook for the
methyl methacrylate (MMA) market.
INSIGHT: China new
energy vehicle industry to continue driving
polymer industry development
By Chris Qi 28-Apr-25 18:31 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–China’s automotive industry has
maintained rapid growth over the last few
years, with the expansion of the country’s
new energy vehicle (NEV) sector particularly
notable, now accounting for 70% of global
production.
China’s Sinopec enters
$4bn JV with Saudi Aramco unit for Fujian
project
By Jonathan Yee 29-Apr-25 12:19 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–China’s state-owned Sinopec has
entered a joint venture (JV) with an Asian
unit of Saudi Aramco to manage the second
phase of a refining and petrochemical complex
at Gulei in Fujian province, it said on 28
April.
Asia glycerine may see
restocking after Labour Day holiday
By Helen Yan 29-Apr-25 14:34 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Asia’s glycerine market may see a
pick-up in restocking activities after the
May Day or Labour Day holiday as Chinese
buyers hold back their purchases, given the
sluggish downstream epichlorohydrin (ECH)
market and uncertainties over the US-China
trade war.
China Apr manufacturing
activity shrinks on US tariffs
pressure
By Jonathan Yee 30-Apr-25 12:09 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–China’s manufacturing activity shrank
in April as export orders weakened amid the
intensifying trade war with the US, official
data showed on Wednesday.
INSIGHT: Rising costs
to curtail China PDH runs, mixed impact on C3
derivatives
By Seymour Chenxia 30-Apr-25 13:00 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Chinese PDH producers are likely to
lower operating rates as US-China trade
tensions drive up propane import costs, which
is expected to tighten propylene supply.
However, the impact on downstream markets
will be mixed due to varying feedstock
sources.
Asia VAM market to slow
as China solar drive eases
By Hwee Hwee Tan 02-May-25 11:35 SINGAPORE
(ICIS)–Asia’s vinyl acetate monomer (VAM)
supply is lengthening as spot demand tied to
a major downstream sector is softening into
May.
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