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OCI - 2021

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Just lucky
0
quote:

eduardo3105 schreef op 27 september 2021 09:21:

In de laat

25.0000 21,179

gaan we er doorheen of is het nog een brug te ver
Net zo als vrijdag, even snuffelen bij 25, dan terugtrekkende beweging en hap, door de 25....
eduardo3105
0
quote:

Just lucky schreef op 27 september 2021 09:28:

[...]Net zo als vrijdag, even snuffelen bij 25, dan terugtrekkende beweging en hap, door de 25....
ging toch wel snel

25.0005 20,687 09:36:47
BultiesBrothers
0
Farmers move to lock in inputs amid high prices, supply disruption: Rabobank
Grain Central, September 27, 2021

WIDESPREAD global disruption to supply is set to see Australian farmers again move to lock in fertiliser and other inputs early for the season ahead, Rabobank says in a recently-released report.

This is despite global fertiliser prices at near-decade highs and expected to remain elevated in the short to medium term.

In its semi-annual ‘Global Fertiliser Outlook: High prices to test demand’, Rabobank said global fertiliser prices had reached their highest level since 2012.

And while these price highs will “test demand”, this will be in the short term, with the “global fertiliser complex” expected to remain supported due to ongoing high commodity prices.

Rabobank’s senior agriculture analyst Wes Lefroy said this global backdrop was set to underpin high Australian nitrogen (urea) and phosphate prices until at “least the end of Q1 2022”, driving another year of early input purchases for many Australian growers.

And the challenges aren’t just confined to fertiliser, with global supply chain disruptions also impacting agri chemicals.

“2022 could be one of the toughest years that retailers of agri input supplies and farmers alike have seen in recent times when it comes to acquiring inputs,” he said.

“We see the production and supply of inputs being impacted by a combination of factors including weather events, the high price for raw materials, environmental regulation and freight being heavily disrupted. Overlaid with strong local demand, this is really ratcheting up the pressure.”

Wes Lefroy

Mr Lefroy said with the current season nearing conclusion, farmers were now turning their minds to the 2022 season, and in particular phosphate and other inputs, such as glyphosate, for spraying over the summer.

“With no major price relief on the horizon and freight disruption continuing, this places farmers in a very difficult position ahead of the 2022 season,” he said.

“‘Just-in-time’ purchases by farmers come with an increased risk of inputs only partially arriving or arriving late. Early purchasing, or locking in early purchases, not only ensures product availability when needed most, but also helps mitigate any further price rises.”

For growers, Mr Lefroy said higher fertiliser prices had already put pressure on margins during the 2021 season.

“Fertiliser prices have risen much faster than local grain prices and this has considerably reduced the relative affordability of fertiliser,” he said.

“Relative to grain prices, AUD-adjusted global DAP (diammonium phosphate) prices are now the highest they have been for more than 10 years.”

And with early indications already looking positive for local demand next season, it doesn’t appear as if any of these factors will ease heading into 2022.

“Indications from the Bureau of Meteorology that southern and eastern regions may experience above-average rainfall this summer could add further to farmer confidence and support summer demand for fertilisers and agri chemicals ahead of the new season,” he said.

Global price support
Globally, the Rabobank Fertiliser Outlook says, elevated fertiliser prices are expected to be “here to stay for at least the remainder of 2021”, primarily supported by demand fuelled by ongoing high agricultural commodity prices.

“From mid-2020 to mid-2021, prices of CBOT (Chicago Board of Trade) soy, corn and wheat either nearly doubled or more than doubled,” the report says, prompting farmers to increase application rates in pursuit of greater revenue potential.

Demand pressures were “exacerbated by constraints on nitrogen, phosphate, and potash supplies”. These included the postponement of new nitrogen supply capacity in India and Nigeria, along with trade duties and sanctions in a number of countries.

Rabobank expects global prices of corn, soybeans and wheat to continue to trade at high levels, at least until the third quarter of 2022, the report says, “incentivising” farmers across the globe to maintain high fertiliser application rates to leverage elevated prices.

Phosphate
In terms of the outlook for global phosphate markets, the report says “tight availability will hold phosphate prices at higher levels for some time”, with processed phosphate at its highest level since 2011.

This, however, has seen phosphate become “less affordable for various crops in some regions, even with the higher commodity prices” and is likely to see some farmers purchase the “minimum level necessary”.

But any price correction resulting from this drop in demand will be short-lived, with the International Fertiliser Association (IFA) forecasting the phosphate balance to be at its lowest level in more than five years as China is expected to limit the country’s exports in the second half of the year.

Glyphosate
Mr Lefroy said the impact of high phosphate prices wasn’t just confined to fertiliser – demand had placed inflationary pressure on prices of glyphosate and a range of other agri chemicals.

“Prices of Chinese glyphosate – the source of 65 per cent of global, and a large chunk of Australian, supplies – have increased 75 per cent this year,” he said.

“In recent weeks, we have also seen a cap on the production of one of the key materials used in the production of glyphosate, which is likely to place further pressure on supply and prices.”

Freight issues
Mr Lefroy said inflated ocean-freight costs were also pushing fertiliser prices higher, adding as much as 10 per cent to a landed tonne of Australian fertiliser, with delivery times also “blowing out dramatically”.

And these bulk and container freight dynamics are unlikely to improve before the end of the year, he said.

“As such, we see supply chain disruption – along with some concerns about input prices rising even higher – prompting farmers to purchase their inputs earlier than usual again this season,” Mr Lefroy said.

“If nothing else, we consider it’s important that buyers are in close communication with their suppliers, as early as possible.”

Source: Rabobank
BultiesBrothers
0
Ik hoop dat de winstnemingen mee zullen vallen en dat we niet weer terug vallen richting de 23
[verwijderd]
0
COMMODITIES

News Wire

Company News

Investing
52m ago

Investors Place $34 Billion of Orders for Adnoc Drilling IPO
Paul Wallace, Bloomberg News

An employee checks his smartphone as he passes a display of drilling bits in the lobby of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) headquarters in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2018. Adnoc is seeking to create world’s largest integrated refinery and petrochemical complex at Ruwais.
An employee checks his smartphone as he passes a display of drilling bits in the lobby of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) headquarters in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2018. Adnoc is seeking to create world’s largest integrated refinery and petrochemical complex at Ruwais. , Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- Investors placed more than $34 billion of orders for Abu Dhabi-based Adnoc Drilling Company PJSC’s $1.1 billion initial public offering, further underscoring the global clamor for equity deals.

Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. sold 11% of the subsidiary in what ranks as the biggest stock-sale yet in the emirate. Adnoc Drilling’s shares were offered at 2.30 dirhams each and will begin trading in Abu Dhabi on Sunday at 10 a.m. local time.

The deal comes as IPO activity in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, particularly for energy and commodity companies, picks up. Valuations have been bolstered by this year’s surge in raw-material prices as economies recover from the coronavirus pandemic.

Adnoc Drilling’s IPO is expected to be followed soon by those of Emirates Global Aluminium and Fertiglobe Holding, a fertilizer company part-owned by Adnoc. In Saudi Arabia, a $1.2 billion listing of ACWA Power International -- the biggest in the kingdom since that of oil giant Aramco in 2019 -- will probably price on Monday.

Adnoc, which pumps almost all the UAE’s oil and gas, is increasingly seeking to raise money from its assets and help the government fund efforts to diversify the economy. Since mid-2020, it has garnered about $15 billion by selling leasing rights over pipelines and property to the likes of Brookfield Asset Management Inc. and Apollo Global Management Inc. The IPO of Adnoc Drilling is the first since it sold some of its fuel-distribution business in 2017.

The lead banks on Adnoc Drilling’s transaction were First Abu Dhabi Bank PJSC, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., HSBC Holdings Plc and JPMorgan Chase & Co. Adnoc will retain an 84% stake in the company, while Houston-based Baker Hughes will keep its 5% share.

(Updates from third paragraph with rise in commodity prices. An earlier version of this story corrected where Brookfield Asset Management is based.)

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.
eduardo3105
0
De koers wordt even 50cent lager gezet zonder nieuws en met beperkte omzet. Dat kan alleen bij Oci.
Dubbeldip
0
quote:

BultiesBrothers schreef op 27 september 2021 14:03:

Ik hoop dat de winstnemingen mee zullen vallen en dat we niet weer terug vallen richting de 23
Positief denken, gewoon een iets groter aanloopje om de 25 te kunnen nemen
Appel72
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Kon het niet laten heb nog wat turbo’s long gekocht
Om 17:15 ben ik vrij en kijk ik wel weer
[verwijderd]
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Nu ook NTR (Nutrien) door de 52wkn hoog heen, OCI was als eerste 2 wkn terug erdoor heen (23) zowel
CF en MOS weer dicht tegen hun 52 wkn hoog.
Just lucky
0
Vergeleken met CF totaal geen vraag. Cf heeft Oci qua stijging al bijna ingehaald vanaf het dieptepunt.
[verwijderd]
0
Tight market to support gas prices for years: Vitol
Published date: 27 September 2021

Share:
Tight fundamentals are likely to support natural gas prices for the next few years, although current "extreme" levels may not be sustained, global trading firm Vitol's chief executive Russell Hardy said.

Gas markets are set for a volatile few months going into the northern hemisphere winter because of low stock levels and strong demand, with weather conditions likely to have a dominant impact on the supply-demand balance, Hardy said at Platts' Asia-Pacific Petroleum Conference (Appec).

"A normal to cold winter will leave Europe short of gas supplies, while a warm winter may solve the current problem," Hardy said. "We are worried about prices, which are very high and are going to start to affect industrial production across Europe and could have an inflationary effect on households as prices go through to customers."

Current prices of $24-26/mn Btu have far exceeded comparative prices of other hydrocarbons and are well in excess of costs that can be managed by some supply chains, such as fertilizers and chemical producers in Europe, he said. "The market is looking for ways to reduce gas demand, on the fear there will not be enough gas available through the winter to supply European demand."

Prices are unlikely to be sustained at current levels for any length of time, but the market is set for a "reasonably bullish" five-year outlook, Hardy said.

Changes to market dynamics in east Asia, such as the growth of LNG and pipeline imports to China that are consumed by the country's household sector, have made gas demand more inelastic, he said. Power sector demand is more responsive to prices, but the shutdowns of coal-fired plants in Europe have left the market "with perhaps a bit more demand for CCGTs [combined-cycle gas turbines] than we can cope with at this moment. We are in an unusual set of circumstances."

By Kevin Foster
BultiesBrothers
0
quote:

Just lucky schreef op 27 september 2021 16:12:

Vergeleken met CF totaal geen vraag. Cf heeft Oci qua stijging al bijna ingehaald vanaf het dieptepunt.
Ja het is net wat je als referentie punt neemt he. Is dat pre corona biiv jan 2020. Is dat ytd 2021 Is dat dieptepunt augustus....
eduardo3105
0
quote:

Appel72 schreef op 27 september 2021 17:10:

Ben benieuwd
Of we vandaag nog boven de 25 Euro eindigen ?
toch netjes na die daling vanmiddag

25.0000 109,964 17:35:04
Appel72
0
quote:

eduardo3105 schreef op 27 september 2021 17:37:

[...]
toch netjes na die daling vanmiddag

25.0000 109,964 17:35:04
Op zich wel goed
Ben technisch niet zo goed maar volgens mij is dit wel goed.
Dat je weer onder de slotkoers van vrijdag ben geweest.
Iets met openings cap oid.
BultiesBrothers
0
Wel weer grappig dat CF afketst tegen de oude weerstand: ca 57 dollar. Benieuwd of ze vandaag deze weerstand weer gaan opzoeken, dat zou betekenen dat de koopinteresse meer is dan alleen een ritje
BultiesBrothers
0
quote:

Just lucky schreef op 27 september 2021 16:12:

Vergeleken met CF totaal geen vraag. Cf heeft Oci qua stijging al bijna ingehaald vanaf het dieptepunt.
Nee hoor. OCI staat sinds dieptepunt 20 augustus nog steeds 10% boven CF
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