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Research & Insights
02 Apr 2020 | 12:30 UTC — London
By Callum Colford and Staff and Eric Yep
Highlights
European IPA maintains record highs as industry bolsters sanitizer output
Polyethylene traders in Europe seek to fill domestic demand void with Asian exports
European spot polyethylene rigid plastic trade hit by COVID-19 lockdowns
European flexible packaging volumes buoyed by demand for food, pharma, hygiene segments
Turkish PP fiber demand collapses as carpet exports halt
Turkish polymer markets see limited activity as quarantine restrictions prove barrier to trade and buyers await price falls amid tumbling monomer contracts
European ABS producers and distributers see demand collapse amid automobile sector shutdown
European PVC demand collapse in April intensifies in both domestic and export markets, with emerging talk of lower operating rates and producer shutdowns
Plunging Asian butadiene prices amid cargo influx and limited demand puts further pressure on European export pricing
London — The following are key facts about the unprecedented challenges and uncertainty faced by the European petrochemical industry as coronavirus infection rates continue to rise and European governments restrict movement in an attempt to limit the virus' spread.
With borders across Europe closing, supply-chain concerns continue to rise, with challenges heard across the petrochemical sector and prices plunging as new price levels for April were released.
"The market is caught between a rock and a hard place -- demand destruction as a result of the coronavirus pandemic and the OPEC price war which could see crude oil prices below $20/b in the coming months," according to Rob Stier, senior manager at S&P Global Platts Analytics.
"Supply chain and logistics constraints could result in producers having to cut rates regardless of margins. We are in unchartered territory, but the risks for the next three to six months are still to the downside," he added.