Korea's DL Chem shrugs off slow petrochemical market in Q3
Kyung-Min Kang
Sep 26, 2022 (Gmt+09:00)
DL Chemical Co., the petrochemical arm of South Korean conglomerate DL Group, is forecast to post robust third-quarter results despite sluggish sales in the petrochemical market.
The key growth drivers are increasing demand for polybutene, DL Chemical’s key product used as lubricants for metalwork in transportation and construction, and strong earnings of the firm’s US-based chemical subsidiary Kraton Corp., sources say.
The Korean chemical firm's third-quarter operating profit is expected to come in much higher than the 31.7 billion won ($22.1 million) posted in the same quarter of 2021.
While some major Korean petrochemical firms saw losses in the second quarter, DL Chemical stood out with 53.3 billion won in operating profit, up 60.5% from the same quarter of 2021. The firm reported 1.33 trillion won in revenue during the April-June quarter, nearly quadruple the 363.8 billion won in the same quarter of 2021.
RAMPING UP SIZE BY ACQUIRING KRATON, CARIFLEX
DL Chemical is the world’s largest polybutene manufacturer, producing 200,000 tons of the material per year at its Yeosu plant in Korea, around 20% of the total global production of 1 million tons. Polybutene prices have steadily increased thanks to strong demand, industry sources said.
Kraton, which DL Chemical acquired for around $2.5 billion last year, contributed to the Korean chemical firm’s earnings growth. The Houston-based specialty polymer producer posted 128 billion won in second-quarter operating profit.
Kraton was spun off from global energy giant Shell Chemicals in 2001 and is the world’s leading styrenic block copolymers (SBC) producer. SBC is widely used in sealants, gasket materials, hotmelt adhesives, footwear soles and bitumen products for road paving and roofing applications.
As DL Chemical completed the acquisition of Kraton in March, the Korean firm’s earnings will significantly improve from the next year, DL Chemical official said.
The Korean chemical firm is proactively expanding its size via mergers and acquisitions. It purchased Singapore-based Cariflex, a specialty synthetic rubber and latex producer, from Kraton for $530 million in March 2020. In July of this year, DL Chemical invested 500 billion won to build the world's largest polyisoprene rubber latex plant in Singapore, which aims to increase Cariflex's global polyisoprene latex production capacity by over 50%.