After the Detour: Cost Curves Reassert Control, Further Exposing Europe’s High-Cost Chemical Base

Global Market Analysis

After the Detour: Cost Curves Reassert Control, Further Exposing Europe’s High-Cost Chemical Base

Key Findings

  • General Thoughts: Red Sea freight normalization could compress Western chemical market premiums, including for methanol, exposing cost curves, trade defenses, and discipline as differentiators in an Asian-led price setting.
  • Supply Chain/Commodities: Petrochemical restructuring now hinges on who controls advantaged products and logistics, as Braskem, Lotte, and INEOS strive to redraw global value chains around gas-based economics.
  • Energy/Upstream: Global chemical feedstock spreads remain the core driver of project economics, rewarding those who benefit from low-cost product flows from the US, including Chevron, Occidental, and Navigator.
  • Sustainability/Energy Transition: Europe’s tightening carbon regime and CBAM silently reprice trade flows, positioning low-carbon products and reliable low-cost power as the next legitimate global reserve currency.
  • Downstream/Other Chemicals: Demand indicators decouple from macroeconomic easing, leaving OEMs, farmers, and chemical buyers constrained by liquidity, confidence, and still varied but disrupted trade policies.

Exhibit 1: Western methanol spot prices to converge toward Asia if freight distortions begin to show structural cracks

Source: Bloomberg, C-MACC Analysis, November 2025

See the PDF below for all charts, tables, and diagrams


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