SECTOR FOCUS OF THE DAY
Rubber Gloves : Raw material prices unlikely to trend
up
Neutral
Over the past weeks, talk of raw material prices – natural
rubber (NR) and nitrile(NBR) – escalating has been rife. The two key events
underpinning these concerns are:- (1) rising crude oil prices following armed
conflict in Iraq; as well as (2) the development of an El Nino weather system,
which may affect the supply of natural rubber.
Based on Bloomberg data, the price of WTI crude oil had
surpassed the USD100/barrel mark in mid-May and continued its upward trend to
USD107/barrel as at end-June. Given that nitrile is derived from the
by-products of crude oil distillation, there have been expectations of a
similar rise in prices (MTD: -1.6%).
While we anticipate a knee-jerk reaction, we are not too
concerned. Contrary to popular belief, nitrile prices move more in tandem with
NR prices than crude oil. With prices appearing to be reversing (i.e. continuing
their downward trend to ~US103/barrel currently), we do not believe that glove
ASPs, which are already under pressure from competition, will be raised.
At present, consensus expectations are for NR prices to
remain depressed until 2016 in view of the oversupply situation. According to
the EIU, the ratio of NR stocks to consumption is 13.5 weeks – the highest
since early 2000s. It envisages NR prices to bottom out in 3Q this year before
bouncing back in 2015. That said, the upside is limited to 1Q14 price levels.
Prices have stabilised at RM4.65/kg wet (-13% YTD).
While higher raw material prices would be a bane to an
already unfavourable operating environment for the rubber glove manufacturers,
we are not too troubled by these developments given our more conservative raw
material input assumptions of RM5.00/kg wet for NR and USD1,300/tonne for
nitrile. Our NEUTRAL call on the sector and earnings estimates are unchanged.
Our only BUY is Kossan Rubber Industries (FV:RM5.00/share).
NEWS HIGHLIGHTS
RHB Capital : RHB Bank issues RM1bil medium-term notes
Automotive Sector : Government still studying abolishing
vehicle APs
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