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Profits of South Korean petrochemical companies will plunge by 2024 due to persistent oversupply

Profits of South Korean petrochemical companies will plunge by 2024 due to persistent oversupply

The South Korean petrochemical firms LG Chem and Lotte Chemical made losses in 2024. This was due to an oversupply that is expected to continue this year. Meanwhile, trade tensions have dampened global economic prospects, said company executives this week.

As a result of the high cost of energy in Europe, and years spent building up capacity in China's top market, petrochemical producers have begun to consolidate in Europe and Asia.

Lotte Chemical's results, released on Friday, revealed that the company's operating losses for 2024 increased by 157% from last year to 895 billion won (619.62 million dollars). The company's data shows that this is the biggest decline in operating income since 2011. The financial data before 2011 is not public.

The basic materials division of the company, which includes petrochemicals and agrochemicals, reduced its operating losses by approximately 52% from the previous quarter, to 175 billion Korean won.

LG Chem's earnings report on Monday showed that the operating profit for 2024 fell by 63.75% compared to the previous year, reaching 916.8 trillion won, its lowest level since 2019.

The petrochemicals division of the company posted an operating loss in the fourth quarter of 99 billion won.

Both companies pointed to a global oversupply as the main problem facing the petrochemicals sector.

On a Monday call, Yang Cheol Ho said that the continued market decline was caused by a surplus of products in Northeast Asia due to continued capacity expansion, and China's slow economic recovery.

The oversupply will continue for many years, as new plants are still being built in China and the Middle East.

On Friday, a senior executive at Lotte Chemical said: "We expect global demand to remain uncertain and overcapacity will continue. This is especially true under Trump 2.0."

U.S. president Donald Trump imposed 10% tariffs for all Chinese imports. This prompted retaliatory duty from China.

While both companies acknowledged that the recovery of Chinese demand is slow, they were optimistic about the recovery of demand in this sector's largest consumer.

A spokesperson for LG Chem said that "very strong measures are being taken" to try and stimulate consumption. He added that this could lead a gradual recovery of the domestic demand for home appliances in China.

A spokesperson for Lotte Chemical said that they are waiting on further announcements by Beijing regarding its stimulus plans for March.

Beijing added home appliances to its list of products included in its consumer exchange scheme in January in an attempt to revive the struggling consumer sector.

According to the Commerce Ministry, the stimulus program boosted consumption growth last year by more than one percentage point.

LG Chem aims to achieve revenues of 26 trillion won by 2025, and will likely maintain capital expenditures at around 2 trillion won. Last year, it cut its capex by about 30% compared to 2023. (1 dollar = 1,444.4300 won). (Reporting and editing by Florence Tan, Jane Merriman and Gabriele Ng)

(source: Reuters)