Players In The Glove Sector Likely To Incur Losses Moving Into Q2: Kenanga

Operating environment for the glove sector remains challenging throughout 2023. Kenanga Research in the recent Sector Update Report reiterated their view that the challenging and competitive business landscape currently faced by the sector will persist throughout 2023. 

As such, Kenanga Research continues to expect players to incur losses moving into quarter two 2023 due to elevated costs of raw material, energy and labour against subdued average selling price and massive capacity leading to suppressed industry utilisation rate averaging 35%-40%. 

As gathered from their channel checks, some players are hopeful that the rate of decline in average selling price is slowing, whilst others believe selling prices have bottomed. 

Hopeful that selling prices have bottomed out, certain players will attempt to raise prices from end-Mar 2023 by an average of 5%-10%, from average selling price of USD19-21 to USD20-22 for the Mar to April shipments. 

Kenanga Research is uncertain if this is viable as they gathered from sources that Chinese players are selling at USD17 per 1,000 pieces. Furthermore, the prospect of raising average selling price is challenging due to the current massive overcapacity situation. 

In view of the increasingly challenging business landscape, glove players are prioritising production at their newer and more efficient factories while temporarily leaving the older ones idle. Kenanga Research added that oversupply is likely to persist. 

“We expect the challenging operating environment to persist in subsequent quarters plagued by massive oversupply, reluctance of customers to commit to sizable orders and hold substantial stocks,” said Kenanga Research.

The Malaysian Rubber Glove Manufacturers Association projects 12%-15% growth in the global demand for rubber gloves annually from 2023, following an estimated 19% contraction to 399 billion pieces in 2022. 

It believes the supply-demand equilibrium may return in six to nine months. “However, we beg to differ, expecting the overcapacity situation to persist at least over the next two years,” said Kenanga Research.

Based on their estimates, the demand-supply situation will only start to head towards equilibrium in 2025 when there is virtually no more new capacity coming onstream while the global demand for gloves continues rising 15% per annum underpinned by rising hygiene awareness. 

Still, capacity is seen to expand further in 2023. They project the demand for gloves to rise by 15% in 2023, which is consistent with Malaysian Rubber Glove Manufacturers Association’s forecast. 

However, this will do little to ease the overcapacity situation as the global glove production capacity will grow another 16% to 595 billion pieces during the year, as ore capacity planned by incumbent and new players during the pandemic years – enticed by super-fat margins that had evaporated – finally come on-line. 

This will result in the excess capacity rising by 22% to 137 billion pieces from 112 billion pieces in 2022. The expanded overcapacity means low prices and depressed plant utilisation will likely persist in 2023. Not helping the already dire situation is the reluctance of customers to commit to sizable orders and hold substantial stocks on expectations of further decline in prices.

Kenanga Research’s 2023 forecasts assume an average selling price per 1,000 pieces of USD20, translating to an estimated 10% decline from 2022. Also, an average plant utilisation of 40% versus an estimated 60% in 2022.

During the 2014/2015 downturn, average selling price of nitrile gloves went as low as USD17/USD18 per 1,000 pieces while industry utilisation was at around 65%-70%. 

“We advocate investors to avoid the sector for now, and not have any top pick for the sector,” said Kenanga Research.

Previous articlePort, Logistics Hampered By CO2 Regulations And Global Trade Slowdown
Next articleTemasek To Acquire Additional 41% Stake In India’s Manipal Health For US$ 2 Billion

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here