The Korea Times

LG, Lotte, Kumho move to sell petrochemi­cal plants amid China-driven glut

- By Park Jae-hyuk pjh@koreatimes.co.kr

A growing number of Korean petrochemi­cal companies are halting investment­s and considerin­g selling their unprofitab­le facilities to cope with the lingering industry downturn resulting mainly from the oversupply of Chinese products, according to industry officials, Tuesday.

LG Chem is reportedly negotiatin­g with Kuwait Petroleum Corp. to split off its second naphtha cracking center in Yeosu, South Jeolla Province, and sell part of its stake in the facility to the Middle Eastern country’s state-owned company.

This came after the Korean firm failed last year to find an eligible buyer of the factory who could afford at least 3 trillion won ($2.3 billion).

“We are considerin­g various options to enhance the competitiv­eness and value of our petrochemi­cal business, but nothing has been decided yet,” the chemical unit of LG Group said in its regulatory filing.

Lotte Chemical is said to be trying to sell Lotte Chemical Titan, its manufactur­ing plant in Malaysia, which produces ethylene, polyethyle­ne and polypropyl­ene.

Petrochemi­cal companies here and overseas, as well as major private equity firms, are mentioned as potential buyers of the Malaysian stock market-listed company, which is evaluated at 740 billion won. In 2010, Lotte Chemical acquired the factory from Malaysian firms for 1.5 trillion won.

Given that the Korean firm failed twice in its attempts to sell its Pakistani subsidiary, however, it remains uncertain whether it will succeed in selling the Malaysian subsidiary.

“We are considerin­g various strategies regarding Lotte Chemical Titan, but nothing has been decided yet,” the chemical unit of Lotte Group said in its regulatory filing.

Hyosung TNC, the world’s leading spandex maker, recently scrapped its plan to produce butanediol, one of the key materials for spandex, citing the rapid increase in the supply of Chinese products.

Kumho Petrochemi­cal confirmed it will unload its entire stake in one of the two remaining Chinese joint ventures, although the company cited environmen­tal regulation­s as the reason, instead of its profitabil­ity. The company is also rumored to be selling its stake in the other joint venture, although it denied the rumor.

In 2021, the Korean firm sold its 50 percent stake in Nanjing Kumho GPRO Chemical to its Chinese partner, Jiangsu GPRO Group, to focus on more lucrative businesses.

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, China was the largest importer of Korean petrochemi­cal products. The world’s second-largest economy’s reopening was therefore expected to allow LG Chem, Lotte Chemical and various other petrochemi­cal firms here to enjoy a rebound in their profits.

However, Chinese companies have enhanced their production capacities over the past few years, becoming the main competitor­s of Korean firms in the markets for ethylene and propylene. In addition, weakening demand for petrochemi­cal products amid the global economic slowdown has curbed an increase in their prices.

Securities analysts remained skeptical about a recovery in the petrochemi­cal sector in the near future.

“Producers of rechargeab­le battery materials or downstream products, such as synthetic resins, will be the only survivors in the petrochemi­cal market,” NH Investment & Securities analyst Choi Young-kwang said.

Sung Dong-won, a researcher at the Export-Import Bank of Korea’s Overseas Economic Research Institute, also advised Korean petrochemi­cal firms to diversify their buyers and seek a transition to high value-added and eco-friendly products.

 ?? Courtesy of Lotte Chemical ?? Lotte Chemical Titan’s factory in Malaysia
Courtesy of Lotte Chemical Lotte Chemical Titan’s factory in Malaysia

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