Is The Worst Over For Rubber Gloves?

So, is the worst really over for the rubber glove industry? Investment house RHB is of view that the recent export data suggests a positive demand recovery sign that coincides with steady ASP performance. Further normalisation in gas tariffs and various cost discipline measures in place could eventually propel profitability in 2024.

The house expects meaningful demand recovery trend by 2H24 before glovemakers recommence capacity expansions by 2025/2026. However there are also downside risks that could weigh in on the sector which include weaker-than-expected demand, inability to pass on costs to customers, and higher-than-expected operating costs.

So, why the optimism? Malaysia’s monthly glove exports remain on a positive YoY growth trend for two consecutive months following a 2% YoY increase in Nov 2023. Despite export volumes contracting by 25% on a MoM basis, export value was 1% MoM higher in Nov 2023. RHB further adds this may indicate cost pass-throughs starting to kickin and a better product mix in Nov. On this front, it also believes the ability to initiate cost pass-throughs will serve as a crucial catalyst to drive profitability moving forward, more so as it also indicates the risk from a price war has gradually dissipated.

Malaysian glovemakers sold at USD19-20/1,000 pieces in Dec 2023, largely unchanged vs 3Q23’s numbers. While domestic glovemakers suffered a weaker ASP in 3Q23, the pick-up in export value could substantiate the management teams’ guidance and expectations of a stabilised ASP trend, which could gradually materialise in 2024.

2024 industry supply is now at 376bn vs 2023’s 373bn, taking into account 1bn in new capacity from Thailand and Hartalega’s progressive capacity transition plan (estimated: 2bn vs New Generation Complex or NGC’s 1.5bn). Local players have yet to announce plans to commence new capacity in 2024, given that domestic industry plant utilisation is still running <50%. Based on all this indicators, RHB is raising its 2024 demand assumptions to 397bn from 386bn previously, which indicates 7% YoY growth from 4% growth previously vs the pre-COVID-19 5-year average growth of 14%. The industry is also expected to achieve equilibrium by 2H24, as the bulk of inventory stockpiled since 2020-2021 has been gradually consumed and is approaching its shelf-life end (3-5 years usually). Malaysian glovemakers still have legs to run predominantly in 1H24 on a temporary demand shift to Malaysia amid China’s Lunar New Year holiday break and ample room for capacity expansion (post demand recovery by 2H24).

Top picks include Hartalega and Kossan and neutral on Top Glove on weaker-than-peers balance sheet and plant utilisation. Improvements in demand visibility and favourable cost outlooks in 2024 is expected to propel profitability. The consistency of order replenishments, ability to implement cost pass-throughs, and gradual improvements in utilisation rates remain the key statistics to watch out for and ensure earnings sustainability

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