Global Chemical Companies’ Margins To Stay Weak In 2024 — Fitch

Weak demand and ample supply will continue to constrain global chemical producers’ volumes and margins in 2024, according to Fitch Ratings.

In a statement on Monday, the ratings agency said overall market conditions have reached the bottom of the cycle in 2023, but it expects little to no recovery in 2024.

It said regions with higher costs, such as Europe and Latin America, are being targeted for exports by producers from Asia, North America and the Middle East that benefit from lower production costs due to cheaper feedstock and energy or large-scale assets.

“We expect this to continue in 2024, leading to variation in performance between regions.

“While we expect overall demand to remain soft in 2024 in North America, issuers’ end-market exposures will continue to influence earnings,” it said.

According to The Edge, Fitch said while chemical companies linked to commodities or non-residential construction are likely to generate weak earnings in 2024, many producers selling into the packaging, consumer nondiscretionary and healthcare end-markets should display more earnings resilience.

It said European producers are particularly affected by higher regional energy costs, despite some moderation since 2022.

The agency said Middle East and North Africa producers with access to competitively priced natural gas are better positioned to withstand the protracted market trough.

“We believe utilisation rates will remain low in 2024.

“This particularly affects commodity producers, as they typically need to operate at rates of 85%-90% to generate profits due to high operating leverage, while specialty producers can remain profitable at much lower rates.

“We also expect more asset-closure decisions — both temporary and permanent — in 2024, especially in Europe, as companies re-evaluate their industrial footprint,” it said.

Fitch said Latin American companies, most of which operate in the second and third cost quartiles, have been particularly affected by China’s goal to become self-sufficient in chemicals.

It said Fitch-rated issuers lost approximately US$8 billion (RM37.5 billion) in aggregate revenue and it expects a recovery in margins to begin only in 1H2025.

Fitch expects a mild recovery in China’s demand as destocking ends.

However, it said the recovery would be limited due to slowing economic growth.

Chinese chemical margins are broadly stable as selling prices appear to have bottomed out and cost pressures should ease.

The agency said healthy GDP growth in India and Indonesia will support domestic demand, but slowing economic growth in many developed markets may weigh on international revenue.

Fitch expects a drier-than-usual summer in Australia to potentially affect demand for crop-protection products and fertilisers in 2024.

The winter crop harvest could remain unaffected due to the delayed onset of rainfall across eastern Australian cropping regions.

Previous articleBursa Malaysia Poised To Extend Winning Streak
Next articleHang Seng Index Futures: Fails To Bounce Back; Drops Below The 20-Day SMA Line

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here