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Ethylene12-May-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Several shares of chemical
companies closed sharply higher on Monday after
the US and China agreed to sharply reduce their
tariffs for 90 days.
The following table shows the major indices
followed by ICIS.
Index
12-May
Change
%
Dow Jones Industrial Average
42,410.10
1,160.72
2.81%
S&P 500
5,844.19
184.28
3.26%
Dow Jones US Chemicals Index
822.31
17.02
2.11%
S&P 500 Chemicals Industry Index
877.99
15.41
1.79%
The lower rates take effect on 14 May.
For the US, it will lower its 2025 tariffs on
Chinese imports to 30% from 145%. The 30%
tariff is made up of the 20% fentanyl tariffs
that the US adopted earlier in 2025 as well as
the 10% baseline tariff that the US has imposed
on most of the world.
For China, it will cut its 2025 tariffs on US
imports to 10% from 125%. The 10% tariff
matches the baseline rate that the US has
imposed on Chinese imports. China also
suspended the non-tariff measures that it has
taken since 2 April. The agreement does not
mention the tariffs that China had imposed in
February on a limited number of US imports,
including liquefied natural gas (LNG). Nor does
the agreement mention the restrictions on
antimony and other minerals that China
announced in December 2024 as well as those on
bismuth and other minerals announced in
February 2025.
Monday’s pause does not change the tariffs that
the two countries adopted during the first term
of US President Donald Trump.
Still, the agreement removes a substantial
amount of tariffs, which should stimulate some
trade. Fitch Ratings estimates that the
effective US tariff rate fell to 13.1% from
22.8%.
The following table shows the performance of
the US-listed shares followed by ICIS.
Name
$ Current
Price
$ Change
% Change
AdvanSix
24.21
1.10
4.76%
Avient
39.01
2.21
6.01%
Axalta Coating Systems
32.7
1.60
5.14%
Braskem
3.79
0.17
4.70%
Chemours
11.99
0.93
8.41%
Celanese
54.53
3.32
6.48%
DuPont
71.27
4.50
6.74%
Dow
30.98
1.50
5.09%
Eastman
82.77
5.27
6.80%
HB Fuller
57.03
2.50
4.58%
Huntsman
12.93
0.88
7.30%
Kronos Worldwide
7.55
0.27
3.71%
LyondellBasell
60.68
3.75
6.59%
Methanex
34.48
2.04
6.29%
NewMarket
636.65
2.17
0.34%
Ingevity
43.04
2.57
6.35%
Olin
22.86
1.53
7.17%
PPG
114.21
5.45
5.01%
RPM International
114.27
3.74
3.38%
Stepan
55.86
1.96
3.64%
Sherwin-Williams
357.15
5.29
1.50%
Tronox
5.77
0.52
9.90%
Trinseo
2.54
0.02
0.79%
Westlake
85.66
5.66
7.07%
Ethylene12-May-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–US-listed shares of chemical
companies surged on Monday after the US and
China agreed to a 90-day pause on the tariffs
they imposed on each other since 2 April.
The lower rates take effect on 14 May.
For the US, it will lower its 2025 tariffs on
Chinese imports to 30% from 145%. The 30%
tariff is made up of the 20% fentanyl tariffs
that the US adopted earlier in 2025 as well as
the 10% baseline tariff that the US has imposed
on most of the world.
For China, it will cut its 2025 tariffs on US
imports to 10% from 125%. The 10% tariff
matches the baseline rate that the US has
imposed on Chinese imports. China also
suspended the non-tariff measures that it has
taken since 2 April. The agreement does not
mention the tariffs that China had imposed in
February on a limited number of US imports,
including liquefied natural gas (LNG). Nor does
the agreement mention the restrictions on
antimony and other minerals that China
announced in December 2024 as well as those on
bismuth and other minerals announced in
February 2025.
Monday’s pause does not change the tariffs that
the two countries adopted during the first term
of US President Donald Trump.
Still, the agreement removes a substantial
amount of tariffs that had brought trade
between the two countries to a standstill.
The following table shows the major indices
followed by ICIS.
Index
12-May
Change
%
Dow Jones Industrial Average
42,132.68
883.30
2.14%
S&P 500
5,805.53
145.62
2.57%
Dow Jones US Chemicals Index
820.86
15.57
1.93%
S&P 500 Chemicals Industry Index
876.52
13.94
1.62%
PAUSE WILL RESTORE TRADE BETWEEN US AND
CHINAPrior to Monday’s
announcement, trade between the US and China
had nearly halted.
The US exported large amounts of polyethylene
(PE) and monoethylene glycol (MEG) to China.
China, in turn, exported large amounts of
methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI),
polyether polyols and polyester fibre to the
US.
The following charts show the chemical trade
between the two countries.
China imported large amounts of chemical
feedstock from the US to supply its ethane
crackers and propane dehydrogenation (PDH)
units. China had supposedly waived its tariffs
on US imports of ethane but maintained those on
liquefied petroleum gas (LPG).
The US imported large amounts of auto parts and
other goods that incorporated large amounts of
plastics and chemicals. The high US tariffs on
Chinese goods caused China to divert shipments
to southeast Asia and other parts of the world.
Those increased shipments from China displaced
locally manufactured goods, leading to a chain
reaction that lowered demand for the plastics
and chemicals that those local manufacturers
used to make those products that were now being
supplied by China.
US CONTINUES TO ROLL BACK
TARIFFSMonday’s announcement is
the most recent example of the US pausing its
tariffs.
These started with the pause that the US
adopted on the 25% tariffs it imposed on
imports from Canada and Mexico.
Later, it paused the reciprocal tariffs that it
imposed on most of the world on 2 April. The US
maintained the 10% baseline tariffs that it
announced that same day.
The US later announced exemptions on
semiconductors and electronics.
Recently it reached an agreement with the
UK that lowered the sectoral tariffs that the
US imposed on automobile and other specific
goods.
PERFORMANCE OF US CHEM
STOCKSThe following table shows
the performance of the US-listed shares
followed by ICIS.
Name
$ Current
Price
$ Change
% Change
AdvanSix
24.21
1.10
4.8%
Avient
38.82
2.02
5.5%
Axalta Coating Systems
32.73
1.63
5.2%
Braskem
3.77
0.15
4.1%
Chemours
11.88
0.82
7.4%
Celanese
55.30
4.09
8.0%
DuPont
71.17
4.40
6.6%
Dow
31.34
1.86
6.3%
Eastman
82.06
4.56
5.9%
HB Fuller
56.59
2.06
3.8%
Huntsman
12.96
0.91
7.6%
Kronos Worldwide
7.63
0.35
4.8%
LyondellBasell
60.80
3.87
6.8%
Methanex
34.61
2.17
6.7%
NewMarket
639.35
4.87
0.8%
Ingevity
41.95
1.48
3.7%
Olin
22.99
1.66
7.8%
PPG
113.84
5.08
4.7%
RPM International
114.26
3.73
3.4%
Stepan
55.99
2.09
3.9%
Sherwin-Williams
357.86
6.00
1.7%
Tronox
5.78
0.53
10.1%
Trinseo
2.62
0.10
4.0%
Westlake
86.18
6.18
7.7%
Thumbnail shows stock charts. Image by
Shutterstock
Speciality Chemicals12-May-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Freight rates from China to the
US are likely to rise in the near term now that
a 90-day pause on extreme tariffs has been
negotiated, but in the longer term, it is
likely rates will continue the downward trend
seen prior to the “Liberation Day”
announcement, according to shipping industry
analysts.
Peter Sand, chief analyst at ocean and freight
rate analytics firm Xeneta, said politicians on
all sides will argue over who has won, who has
lost and who has the better deal, but the most
important point is that we will now see goods
flowing more easily between the world’s biggest
trading nations.
“The spiraling trade war was catastrophic for
businesses, so there will be huge relief that
diplomacy appears to be returning,” Sand said.
Judah Levine, head of research at online
freight shipping marketplace and platform
provider Freightos, said rates will rise, but
not explode.
“The volume rebound will probably signal the
start of an early peak season that will keep
rates elevated – but we might not see last
year’s $8,000+/FEU highs due to a more
competitive, well-supplied carrier landscape
already keeping rates lower year on year,”
Levine said.
Levine said he expects tighter capacity as
carriers work to reposition vessels and reduce
the number of blank sailings that were used to
support rates during the height of the tariff
war.
Sand agreed, noting that carriers responded to
falling volumes from China to the US by
slashing container shipping capacity and
redeploying it onto other trades, such as the
Asia to Europe route.
“It takes time to shift capacity back again, so
a revival in volumes from China to US may mean
shippers have to pay a little over the odds in
the short term,” Sand said.
Lars Jensen, president of consultant Vespucci
Maritime, said to expect an immediate
surge of cargo from China to the US, based on
two reasons: first, there is already a large
amount of cargo ready to go, as US importers
have been adopting a “wait-and-see” strategy
over the past month and abstained from shipping
cargo which is already ready.
Second, the 90-day pause expires in the middle
of the usual peak season for holiday-related
goods going to the US.
“We should therefore expect a possible
pull-forward of cargo creating a shorter,
sharper, peak season from basically right now,”
Jensen said.
US ports were already beginning to see fewer
vessels arriving or scheduling arrivals because
of the trade war, but Jensen said the 90-day
pause could lead to a swift change.
“With the expected surge in cargo, we should
also expect that the US ports which are right
now facing a massive drop in cargo volume will
switch to face a surge of cargo with a
substantial risk of bottleneck issues and
delays as a consequence,” Jensen said.
Average spot rates are down by 56% and 48% from
China to the US West Coast and US East Coast,
respectively, since 1 January, despite an
uptick of 18% and 12% on 1 April, according to
Xeneta data.
Rates have fallen slightly since then but
remain elevated compared with the end of March.
Container ships and costs for shipping
containers are relevant to the chemical
industry because while most chemicals are
liquids and are shipped in tankers, container
ships transport polymers, such as polyethylene
(PE) and polypropylene (PP), which are shipped
in pellets.
They also transport liquid chemicals in
isotanks.
Visit the US
tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals and
energy topic page
Visit the Logistics: Impact on
chemicals and energy topic page

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Ethylene12-May-2025
HOUSTON (ICIS)–Here are the top stories from
ICIS News from the week ended 9 May.
INSIGHT: Mexico’s automotive tariffs
raise specter of recession, rest of LatAm
more resilient
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.
US Celanese to cut rates if demand
falters further in increasingly ‘uncertain’
H2 – execs
Celanese will aim to weather what is becoming
an increasingly “uncertain” second half of
2025 by reducing inventories and keeping firm
cost controls, but also by reducing operating
rates if demand is not there, the CEO at the
US-based acetyls and engineered materials
producer said on Tuesday.
Braskem-Idesa launches its ethane
import terminal in Mexico
Braskem-Idesa (BI) officially launched the
Terminal Quimica Puerto Mexico (TQPM) on
Wednesday, according to a notice from the
company.
US-UK announce trade deal to open up
markets for chemicals, ethanol, agriculture,
autos, steel and aluminium,
aircraft
The US and UK announced the first trade deal
since the US 2 April ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs
which would open up UK market access for US
chemicals, machinery, beef, ethanol and other
agricultural products, government officials
said.
Canada’s Pembina assures on US
tariffs and Path2Zero
delay
Pembina Pipeline does not expect material
near-term impacts from the US tariffs or from
the delay of Dow’s Path2Zero
petrochemicals project in Alberta province,
the top executives of the Canadian midstream
energy company told analysts in an update on
Friday.
Ammonia12-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Ridley Corporation has agreed to
acquire Dyno Nobel’s fertilizer distribution
business for (Australian dollar) A$300 million,
the Australian animal nutrition company said on
Monday.
The deal to buy IPF Distribution includes an
option to acquire its Geelong North Shore
property for A$75 million.
The Phosphate Hill fertilizer manufacturing
operations, and the closure and remediation
costs associated with the Gibson Island and
Geelong manufacturing operations are excluded
from the deal, Ridley said.
IPF Distribution is part of Incitec Pivot
Fertilisers, a manufacturer and distributor of
fertilizers within the wider business of
explosives maker Dyno Nobel.
Completion of the transaction is expected by Q3
2025 and no later than 30 November, subject to
certain agreed conditions.
Ammonia12-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Fertiglobe has agreed to acquire
Wengfu Australia’s distribution assets as part
of a strategic expansion strategy, the urea and
ammonia producer said on Monday.
The acquisition will expand the Abu
Dhabi-headquartered firm’s downstream reach and
enhance access to Australian customers. It
currently supplies around 600,000 tonnes/year
of urea to the country.
The purchase price of Wengfu will be based on
net asset value plus a premium of around $8
million, with the final amount to be determined
at closing.
“Acquiring Wengfu’s assets marks a strategic
step in our value-driven growth strategy and
accelerates our commercial footprint in
Australia, one of the world’s fastest-growing
agricultural regions,” said Fertiglobe CEO
Ahmed El-Hoshy.
Fertiglobe said the transaction was expected to
be 2.8% and 4.1% earnings per share (EPS)
accretive before synergies in 2026 and 2027
respectively.
Closing of the deal is subject to customary
regulatory and legal approvals, it added in a
statement.
Petrochemicals12-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Click
here to see the latest blog post on
Chemicals & The Economy by Paul Hodges,
which looks at Apple’s dilemma on how to deal
with the trade tariff war.
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 Oil12-May-2025
SINGAPORE (ICIS)–The US and China have agreed
to de-escalate trade war with sharp cuts on
tariffs by 14 May 2025, for an initial period
of three months, according to a joint statement
issued on Monday by the world’s two biggest
economies.
The statement was a result of a two-day
closed-door discussions between officials of
the two sides in Geneva, Switzerland over the
weekend.
The US will suspend the 24% tariffs on Chinese
goods for 90 days, while retaining
the remaining ad valorem rate of 10%
announced on 2 April. Tariffs announced
on 8 April and 9 April will be removed.
On China’s side, Beijing will lower its tariffs
on US imports to 10% and suspend the 24% duties
for 90 days, with other charges to be scrapped.
Additionally, China will adopt all necessary
administrative measures to suspend or remove
the non-tariff countermeasures taken against
the US since 2 April 2025.
After taking these actions, the parties will
establish a mechanism to continue discussions
about economic and trade relations, the
statement said.
Visit the ICIS Topic
Page: US tariffs, policy – impact on chemicals
and energy.
Speciality Chemicals12-May-2025
LONDON (ICIS)–Here are some of the top
stories from ICIS Europe for the week ended 9
May.
Covestro Q1 EBITDA
halves, but in line with
expectationsCovestro’s Q1
2025 earnings before interest, tax,
depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) halved
compared to last year, but were at the upper
end of its forecast, the German producer
announced on Tuesday.
European orthoxylene
contract price for May falls to six-month
lowThe Europe orthoxylene
(OX) contract price for May has fallen by
€50/tonne to its lowest level in six months,
driven by softer feedstock mixed xylenes
(MX) and gas costs in April.
European Commission to
begin investigation into PET imports from
Vietnam, TurkeyThe
initiation of an investigation by the
European Commission into polyethylene
terephthalate (PET) imports into the EU from
Vietnam and Turkey is imminent, sources said.
LOGISTICS: Red Sea
ceasefire could boost Suez Canal, collapse
freight rates, heap pressure on Europe
chemicalsThe ceasefire
between the US and Houthis in Yemen may crash
freight rates and increase import pressure on
chemical producers in Europe if it is
permanent and traffic returns to the Suez
Canal.
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