Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

For petrochemical industry, the recession has already begun

By Amanda Drane, Staff writer - 6h ago
Source: The Houston Chronicle

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/for-petrochemical-industry-the-recession-has-already-begun

As far as the petrochemical industry is concerned, the recession is here.

People are buying less. Restaurants and retailers are restocking less. Now, petrochemical companies are making less.

Dow, the world’s largest chemical company, said last week it’s slashing global polyethylene production by about 15 percent. Meanwhile, Houston-based Westlake Corp. is halting production of styrene — used in rubber and food containers — at its Lake Charles facility. The cutbacks, analysts say are the beginning of a recession washing ashore for chemical-makers in Texas.

“Investors to some degree still have been debating: Are we going to have these conditions?” Aleksey Yefremov, a senior chemicals analyst at Keybanc, the first of several firms to downgrade stocks for petrochemical companies over the past week. “My point: We already have them.”

The moves that petrochemical companies are making are temporary responses to warehouses filling with flexible plastics made of polyethylene such as coffee cup lids and to-go containers. It’s a sign, analysts say, that consumers are cutting back on such things as takeout dinners and iced coffees and buying fewer groceries. Walmart and Target said in earnings calls last month that “excess inventory” was a problem plaguing major retailers.

Demand for polyethylene and products made with it tends to mirror gross domestic product closely, said Chris Mudd, a chemicals analyst and managing director for Chiron Financial, a Houston-based energy investment banking firm.

It is inevitable that Houston-based chemical giant LyondellBasell will reduce plastics production, analysts said — if it hasn’t already. (The company wouldn’t comment for this story.)

“The writing on the wall is we’re heading into a recession that results in a slowdown of demand for a broad range of products,” Mudd said, pointing to two consecutive quarters of declining GDP. “What big companies will do is try to be responsible and slow down their production ahead of that so they don’t have a bunch of chemicals sitting in warehouses somewhere.”

Prices for polyethylene and polyvinyl chloride, or PVC, are backing off highs reached as the pandemic drove historic demand for takeout, consumer goods and materials used in housing construction, Yefremov said. Those markets are now cooling.

Just as demand for flexible plastics is softening, new polyethylene plants are coming online, contributing to oversupply. Shell is preparing to launch a new polyethylene facility in Pennsylvania. Bayport Polymers is expected to open its new polyethylene facility in Bayport later this year.

Declining demand is hitting harder in China, where the economy continues to be shaken by new COVID-related lockdowns, and in Europe, where soaring energy costs are making everything more expensive and cutting deeply into consumer budgets, Yefremov said.

U.S. chemical-makers usually benefit from cheap and plentiful domestic natural gas, but Europe’s shortages are upending that equation.

With winter approaching and demand for heating fuel rises, analysts say, sky-high energy prices will continue to raise the cost and risk of producing more chemicals in the months ahead.

amanda.drane@chron.com

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| 1273 views | | 6 replies (last September 8, 2022) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1iBnY6On

6 replies (most recent on top)

@edq. You are clearly a troll and do not know how EM lays people off. Two weeks per year service?? You're not even following what's going on.

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Post ID: @1ppq+1iBnY6On

It’s great that the Campus management removed all single use plastic as a sustainability move. It also decreased demand on the Chemical side of product solutions. If Exxon does it, every other corporation should too… and that’s how we start a movement. Congrats XOM Management ;-)

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Post ID: @1akv+1iBnY6On

@tqe+1iBnY6On

I know it’s fun to be an Eeyore, but if you know anything about our business we’ve been building a world scale chemical plant every 2-3 years since 2017 with no real plans on stopping through at least 2025, and I know we have more projects slated up through the 2030s. Quit being a Debbie downer.

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Post ID: @lme+1iBnY6On

@OP The petrochemical industry (such as it is), has been in a quasi-recession for years.

When was the last time anyone saw a plan for sustained growth implemented? Hiring surges? Investment in new technology? None of the above.

Get used to stagnation being the best case scenario, and get ready for the gravy train to come to a screeching halt (if it doesn’t fly off the rails first).

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Post ID: @tqe+1iBnY6On

@hof+1iBnY6On

The article means that our stock price will drop over the next 12 months as the world economy slows. It does not matter if H/R or any other employee posted the article.

If we are lucky, our senior executives will announce a layoff with 2 weeks severance per year of service or our senior executives will announce an enhanced retirement package.

Perhaps we will even lower the retirement age for 100% of our pension to age 50.

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Post ID: @edq+1iBnY6On

This article was planted by HR to prepare us for more severe cutbacks in advance of a buyout.

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Post ID: @hof+1iBnY6On

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