Resin company share prices as varied as the economy at large

Much like the broader economy, plastics materials stocks have been sending mixed signals so far in 2023.

Higher interest rates and the possibility of recession — and now potential bank turmoil — have spread uncertainty throughout financial markets. This is seen in the Dow Jones Industrial Average being down 2.5 percent this year as of late trading March 23, while the broader S&P 500 is up 4.2 percent.

Materials stocks have been equally mixed. Per-share prices at four of the 11 public materials firms tracked by Plastics News are up 9-14 percent in that period. That group includes Avient Corp., Westlake Corp., Hexcel Corp. and Cabot Corp.

Per-share prices at Dow Inc. have seen a gain of 2.5 percent, while Celanese Corp.‘s per-share price is down less than 1 percent. Price drops of 2-5 percent have been seen at Eastman Chemical Co., Chemours Co., Huntsman Corp. and AdvanSix Inc.

Trinseo‘s per-share stock price has had the roughest go of it, dropping more than 11 percent in that almost three-month stretch.

Earlier this year, consulting firm Deloitte said that heading into 2023, the chemical industry “is in a strong financial position.”

“The year ahead could be a turning point when companies emphasize the long-term viability of product portfolios in the context of sustainability in a move toward asset-oriented deal-making,” officials said in a research report.

They added that this trend “will take longer to scale, given the uncertainty around feedstock prices, energy demand, supply chain, and end-market demand, affecting the appetite for strategic buyers” but that the foundations for this shift “are being laid in the current environment.”

This post appeared first on Plastics News.