US Propylene Holds Steady While Asia’s LLDPE Slides Under Pressure of Currency Woes and Weak Demand

In the US, propylene prices remained broadly stable on Tuesday as trading volumes sagged. According to a source in the region, the market bore the mark of a disconnect between what buyers are willing to pay and what sellers are asking, keeping the pricing tone flat. Polymer grade propylene continued to trade in the 32.50-33.00 cents per lb FD US Gulf range, with refinery grade holding firm at 28.50-29.00 cents per lb.

Meanwhile, over in Asia, Linear Low-Density Polyethylene (LLDPE) prices slipped this week, pressured by a combination of domestic weak demand, shrinking import arbitrage margins, and the influx of competitively priced foreign offers. In Far East Asia, film-grade LLDPE dropped to USD 840-880/mt CFR, down by approximately USD 10/mt from the previous week. In Southeast Asia, the falls were steeper, with prices falling around USD 20/mt to USD 890-950/mt CFR.

Specific supplier offers added further nuance: in China, a Saudi Arabian producer quoted its film-grade LLDPE at USD 840/mt for September delivery, while an Indian producer put forward offers in the USD 880/mt bracket for October. Middle Eastern suppliers broadly pitched in the USD 840-880/mt range for October shipments. In India, LLDPE was pegged to USD 900-930/mt CFR, reflecting a USD 10/mt drop week-on-week, amid weak downstream activity, large converter inventories, and continuing rupee depreciation.

Regional market dynamics were largely defensive. In countries like Vietnam and others in Southeast Asia, U.S.-origin imports at lower landed costs weighed on local sentiment and muted buying behavior. Buyers largely refrained from significant purchases, instead limiting themselves to near-term or necessity-driven needs. The expectation of further price falls, combined with macroeconomic uncertainties, kept restocking minimal.

Looking forward, the short-term outlook for LLDPE in Asia appears soft. Unless downstream demand picks up appreciably after upcoming festivals or there is a tightening of supply, whether through plant turnarounds, export constraints, or currency swings, prices are unlikely to see strong upward movement.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Popular News

Categories

We are the leading information provider of the Petrochemical Industry and Our team comes with a strong background of Petrochemical industry and has experience of over 28 years.

© 2025 – Polymerduniya by NZ Designs