chemicals


This report analyzes the global chemicals market in terms of market size (taken at producer selling price (PSP), key drivers and resistors, trends and competitive positioning. It includes profiles of the top ten companies in the industry along with 5-year financial analysis and in-depth SWOT analysis.

Scope

* Performance of the global chemicals market on the basis of sales, volume and respective growth patterns over the past five years
* Obtain descriptive profiles of the top ten leading players including strategic initiatives undertaken in the last 12 months
* Analysis of the Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats of the top 10 chemicals companies along with business overview and financials
* Benchmark the performance of the top 10 players for the past five years; includes revenue comparison, profitability analysis, industry-specific ratios

Highlights

The global chemicals market generated total revenues of $2,334.3 billion in 2007, representing a CAGR of 6.6% for the period spanning 200307.

Base chemical sales proved the most lucrative for the global chemicals market in 2007, generating total revenues of $917.4 billion, equivalent to 39.3% of the market’’s overall value.

The performance of the market is forecast to slightly decelerate, with an anticipated CAGR of 5.2% for the five-year period 200712, which is expected to drive the market to a value of $3,007.9 billion by the end of 2012.

Reasons to Purchase

* Save time, money and resources on analyzing the top 10 chemicals companies using this report
* Analyze the global chemicals market with key industry metrics including market value, market volume, and growth forecasts
* Assess the intensity of competition based on the 5-forces model including degree of rivalry, substitutes, new entrants, buyer power and supplier power

Table of Contents:

Table of Contents 2
Table OF FIGURES 3
TABLES 4
Executive Summary 5
Industry analysis 5
Industry definition 5
Research highlights 5
Market Value 6
Market Segmentation-Product 7
Market Segmentation-Geography 8
Five Forces Analysis 9
Summary 9
Buyer power 10
Supplier power 11
New entrants 12
Substitutes 14
Rivalry 15
Top 10 Companies Landscape 16
Top 10 Companies Landscape 16
BASF SE 18
The Dow Chemical Company 18
LyondellBasell Industries AF S.C.A. 18
Bayer AG 18
Saudi Basic Industries Corporation 18
E. I. duPont de Nemours and Company 18
Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings Corporation 19
Akzo Nobel N.V. 19
Sumitomo Chemical Co., Ltd. 19
PPG Industries, Inc. 19
Revenue analysis 20
Financial performance analysis 22
Operating profit analysis 23
Net profit analysis 24
Ratio analysis 25
Current ratio 25
Return on assets (ROA) 25
Debt/equity ratio (D/E ratio) 25
Inventory turnover ratio 26
Company Reports 27
BASF SE 27
Company overview 27
Business description 27
SWOT analysis 29
Strengths 29
Weaknesses 30
Opportunities 31
Threats 33
Recent developments 33
The Dow Chemical Company 37
Company overview 37
Business description 37
SWOT analysis 40
Strengths 40
Weaknesses 41
Opportunities 42
Threats 43
Recent developments 43
LyondellBasell Industries AF S.C.A. 46
Company overview 46
Business description 46
SWOT analysis 47
Strengths 47
Weaknesses 49
Opportunities 50
Threats 51
Recent developments 53
Bayer AG 54
Company overview 54
Business description 54
SWOT analysis 56
Strengths 56
Weaknesses 57
Opportunities 58
Threats 59
Recent developments 60
Saudi Basic Industries Corporation 63
Company overview 63
Business description 63
SWOT analysis 64
Strengths 64
Weaknesses 65
Opportunities 66
Threats 67
Recent developments 68
E. I. duPont de Nemours and Company 69
Company overview 69
Business description 69
SWOT analysis 71
Strengths 71
Weaknesses 72
Opportunities 73
Threats 74
Recent developments 75
Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings Corporation 78
Company overview 78
Business description 78
SWOT analysis 79
Strengths 79
Weaknesses 80
Opportunities 81
Threats 82
Recent developments 83
Akzo Nobel N.V. 84
Company overview 84
Business description 84
SWOT analysis 86
Strengths 86
Weaknesses 88
Opportunities 88
Threats 90
Recent developments 91
Sumitomo Chemical Co., Ltd. 93
Company Overview 93
Business description 93
SWOT analysis 95
Strengths 95
Weaknesses 96
Opportunities 97
Threats 97
Recent developments 98
PPG Industries, Inc. 99
Company overview 99
Business description 99
SWOT analysis 100
Strengths 100
Weaknesses 102
Opportunities 103
Threats 104
Recent developments 105
Financial Analysis 107
BASF SE 107
The Dow Chemical Company 110
LyondellBasell Industries AF S.C.A. 113
Bayer AG 116
Saudi Basic Industries Corporation 119
E. I. duPont de Nemours and Company 122
Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings Corporation 125
Akzo Nobel N.V. 128
Sumitomo Chemical Co., Ltd. 131
PPG Industries, Inc. 134
APPENDIX 137

List of Tables
Table 1: Global chemicals market value, $ billion, 2003-07 6
Table 2: Global chemicals market segmentation-% share, by value, 2007 7
Table 3: Global chemicals market segmentation-% share, by value, 2007 8
Table 4: Turnover of global top 10 chemical companies, $ million, FY2008 16
Table 5: Revenue growth of global top 10 chemical companies, 2006-08 20
Table 6: Key financials of global top chemical companies, FY2008 22
Table 7: Key industry-specific ratios, FY2008 25
Table 8: BASF SE-Financial and operational highlights, 2004-08 ($ million) 107
Table 9: BASF SE-Key industry-specific ratios, 2004-08 109
Table 10: The Dow Chemical Company-Financial and operational highlights, 2004-08 ($ million) 110
Table 11: The Dow Chemical Company-Key industry-specific ratios, 2004-08 112
Table 12: LyondellBasell Industries-Financial and operational highlights, 2004-08 ($ million) 113
Table 13: LyondellBasell Industries-Key industry-specific ratios, 2004-08 115
Table 14: Bayer AG-Financial and operational highlights, 2004-08 ($ million) 116
Table 15: Bayer AG-Key industry-specific ratios, 2004-08 118
Table 16: Saudi Basic Industries Corporation-Financial and operational highlights, 2004-08 ($ million) 119
Table 17: Saudi Basic Industries Corporation-Key industry-specific ratios, 2004-08 121
Table 18: E. I. duPont de Nemours and Company-Financial and operational highlights, 2004-08 ($ million) 122
Table 19: E. I. duPont de Nemours and Company- Key industry-specific ratios, 2004-08 124
Table 20: Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings Corporation-Financial and operational highlights, 2004-08 ($ million) 125
Table 21: Mitsubishi Chemical Holdings Corporation-Key industry-specific ratios, 2004-08 127
Table 22: Akzo Nobel N.V.-Financial and operational highlights, 2004-08 ($ million) 128
Table 23: Akzo Nobel N.V.-Key industry-specific ratios, 2004-08 130
Table 24: Sumitomo Chemical Co., Ltd.-Financial and operational highlights, 2004-08 ($ million) 131
Table 25: Sumitomo Chemical Co., Ltd.-Key industry-specific ratios, 2004-08 133
Table 26: PPG Industries, Inc.-Financial and operational highlights, 2004-08 ($ million) 134
Table 27: PPG Industries, Inc.-Financial and operational highlights, 2004-08 ($ million) 136

List of Figures
Figure 1: Global chemicals market value, $ billion, 2003-07 6
Figure 2: Global chemicals market segmentation-% share, by value, 2007 7
Figure 3: Global chemicals market segmentation-% share, by value, 2007 8
Figure 4: Forces driving competition in the global chemicals industry 9
Figure 5: Drivers of buyer power in the global chemicals industry 10
Figure 6: Drivers of supplier power in the global chemicals industry 11
Figure 7: Factors influencing the likelihood of new entrants in the global chemicals industry 12
Figure 8: Factors influencing the threat of substitutes in the global chemicals industry 14
Figure 9: Drivers of degree of rivalry in the global chemicals industry 15
Figure 10: Turnover of global top 10 chemical companies, $ million, FY2008 17
Figure 11: Revenue growth of global top 10 chemical companies , 2006-08 21
Figure 12: Operating profit analysis, FY2008 23
Figure 13: Net profit analysis, FY2008 24

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Renewable Chemicals (2009 - 2014)

Report description

The global renewable chemicals market is estimated to reach US $ 59 billion in 2014 from about US $ 45 billion in 2009. Though several companies in the chemicals industry were affected by the recent economic crisis, the companies producing renewable chemicals are expected to weather the crisis. The driving force for the renewable chemicals market is the low requirement of capital for both production as well as feedstock. Moreover, consumer demand for green products and governmental support to the industry for reducing dependence on finite non renewable petroleum feedstock as well as reducing green house gas emission has been driving the market for renewable chemicals. The growth of the industrial biotechnology has also contributed to the growth of the overall renewable chemicals market due to their innovations in biocatalysis that finds extensive usage in manufacturing renewable chemicals. Renewable chemicals find industrial, pharmaceutical application as well as in consumer products.

Focus on reducing global green house gas emissions levels has led to an increase in the activities in the field of renewable chemicals. Foreseeing the rising importance of renewable chemicals the major players in the chemicals industry such as Dow, BASF have already rendered an increased attention on this market. Though the market for alcohols in the overall renewable chemicals market accounts for the largest share of the market, polymers is expected to gain the maximum growth rate for the next five years. Renewable chemicals such as polymers are expected to command significant share in the overall polymers market mostly due to their usage in making biodegradable and compostable plastics and consumer goods such as cell phones, laptops etc.  Platform chemicals also play an important role in the renewable chemicals market since they contain multiple functional groups and hence present practical potential for their conversion to families of useful products.

Market estimates and forecast

The report provides indepth market estimates and forecast for global renewable chemicals market as follows:

1. Renewable chemicals – Products
Alcohols, organic chemicals, ketones, polymers and other markets.

2. Renewable chemicals - Application
Industrial, transportation, textiles, safe food supply, environment, communication, housing, recreation, health & hygiene and other applications.

3. Renewable chemicals – Catalysis
Biocatalysis and chemical catalysis

4. Renewable chemicals – Technology
Thermo-chemical conversion, fermentation and bioconversion, product separation and bioconversion, enzymatic hydrolysis, gasification-fermentation, acid hydrolysis, biochemical-thermochemical, biochem-organisolve, fischer-tropsch diesel, reductive transformation, dehydrative transformation and other technologies.

5. Renewable chemicals – Platform Chemicals
1, 4-diacids, 2, 5-furan dicarboxylic acid, 3-hydroxypropionic acid, aspartic acid, glucaric acid, glutamic acid, itaconic acid, levulinic acid, glycerol and other chemicals.

6. Renewable chemicals – Bio feedstock
Starch, cellulose, lignin and oil/fats/protein.

7. Renewable chemicals – Source
Plant biomass, animall biomass and marine biomass.

Each section will provide market data, market drivers, trends and opportunities, top-selling products, key players, and competitive outlook. This report will also provide more than 100 market tables for various geographic regions covering the sub-segments and micro-markets. In addition, the report also provides 50 company profiles for each of its sub-segments.

What makes our reports unique?

- We provide the longest market segmentation chain in this industry- not many reports provide market breakdown upto level 5.
- Each report is about 250 pages with 100+ market data tables, 40 competitive company profiles, minimum 50 micro markets analysed which are collectively exhaustive and mutually exclusive, 300 patents analyzed,
- No single report by any other publisher provides market data for all the segments viz products, services, applications, ingredients, technology, stakeholders in a single report for all the four geographies together- US, Europe, APAC, ROW.
- We provide 10% customization- normally it is researched that clients do not specific market intelligence what they are looking for. Our customization will ensure that you necessarily get the market intelligence you are looking for and we get a loyal customer.
- 15 pages of high level analysis including benchmarking strategies, best practices and the market’s cash cows (BCG matrix). We conduct detailed market positioning, product positioning and competitive positioning. Entry strategies, gaps and opportunities are identified for all the stakeholders.
- Comprehensive market analysis for biomass processing companies, chemical producers, bioenergy generating companies, biochemical technology consulting companies, R&D laboratories and government organizations for biomass conversion.

Key questions answered

- Which are the high growth segments/cash cows; how is the market segmented in terms of applications, products, services, ingredients, technologies, stakeholders.
- What are market estimates and forecast; which are markets are doing well and which are not?
- Where are the gaps and opportunities; what is driving the market;
- Which are the key playing fields? Which are the winning edge imperatives?
- How is the competitive outlook; who are the main players in each of the segments; what are the key selling products; what are their strategic directives, operational strength and product pipelines? Who is doing what?

Powerful Research and analysis
The analyst working with MarketsandMarkets come from the renowned publishers and market research firms globally adding their expertise and domain understanding. We get the facts from over 22,000 news and information sources, a database of hundred thousand of key industry participants and draw on our relationship with more than 900 market research companies globally. We, at MarketsandMarkets, are inspired to help our clients grow by providing apt business insight with our huge market intelligence repository

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This report discusses mining chemical demand in the US for the years 2001 and 2006, with forecasts for 2011. Topics covered include market size; function, application and market segmentation; environmental regulations and mine safety; mining industry outlook; trade, market environment, application and market forecasts, industry composition and leading participants. Function segments include explosives; leaching agents; pH adjusters; lubricants; flocculants; and other. Application segments include blasting and drilling, mineral processing, water and waste treatment, and other applications; market segments cover coal, precious metals, copper, iron ore and other markets. This 19 page report also includes a highlights summary and a resources section.
 
 Table of Contents
 
 HIGHLIGHTS
 
 INDUSTRY OVERVIEW
 Market Size
 Materials Segmentation
 Applications Segmentation
 
 INDUSTRY TRENDS & FORECASTS
 Market Environment
 Materials Forecasts
 Applications Forecasts
 
 INDUSTRY STRUCTURE
 Industry Composition
 Industry Leaders
 
 RESOURCES
 
 Focus Report Overview
 
 Each Focus provides access to a wealth of industry insights and analysis including:
 
 Market size
 Product segmentation
 Market segmentation
 Product forecasts
 Market forecasts
 Industry composition
 Market leaders
 Business trends

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2006-2011 World Outlook for Phosphorus Trichloride (chloride, 100 Percent PCl3)

WHAT IS LATENT DEMAND AND THE P.I.E.?

The concept of latent demand is rather subtle. The term latent typically refers to something that is dormant, not observable, or not yet realized. Demand is the notion of an economic quantity that a target population or market requires under different assumptions of price, quality, and distribution, among other factors. Latent demand, therefore, is commonly defined by economists as the industry earnings of a market when that market becomes accessible and attractive to serve by competing firms. It is a measure, therefore, of potential industry earnings (P.I.E.) or total revenues (not profit) if a market is served in an efficient manner. It is typically expressed as the total revenues potentially extracted by firms. The “market” is defined at a given level in the value chain. There can be latent demand at the retail level, at the wholesale level, the manufacturing level, and the raw materials level (the P.I.E. of higher levels of the value chain being always smaller than the P.I.E. of levels at lower levels of the same value chain, assuming all levels maintain minimum profitability).

The latent demand for phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3) is not actual or historic sales. Nor is latent demand future sales. In fact, latent demand can be lower either lower or higher than actual sales if a market is inefficient (i.e., not representative of relatively competitive levels). Inefficiencies arise from a number of factors, including the lack of international openness, cultural barriers to consumption, regulations, and cartel-like behavior on the part of firms. In general, however, latent demand is typically larger than actual sales in a country market.

For reasons discussed later, this report does not consider the notion of “unit quantities”, only total latent revenues (i.e., a calculation of price times quantity is never made, though one is implied). The units used in this report are U.S. dollars not adjusted for inflation (i.e., the figures incorporate inflationary trends) and not adjusted for future dynamics in exchange rates (i.e., the figures reflect average exchange rates over recent history). If inflation rates or exchange rates vary in a substantial way compared to recent experience, actually sales can also exceed latent demand (when expressed in U.S. dollars, not adjusted for inflation). On the other hand, latent demand can be typically higher than actual sales as there are often distribution inefficiencies that reduce actual sales below the level of latent demand.

As mentioned in the introduction, this study is strategic in nature, taking an aggregate and long-run view, irrespective of the players or products involved. If fact, all the current products or services on the market can cease to exist in their present form (i.e., at a brand-, R&D specification, or corporate-image level) and all the players can be replaced by other firms (i.e., via exits, entries, mergers, bankruptcies, etc.), and there will still be an international latent demand for phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3) at the aggregate level. Product and service offering details, and the actual identity of the players involved, while important for certain issues, are relatively unimportant for estimates of latent demand.

THE METHODOLOGY

In order to estimate the latent demand for phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3) on a worldwide basis, I used a multi-stage approach. Before applying the approach, one needs a basic theory from which such estimates are created. In this case, I heavily rely on the use of certain basic economic assumptions. In particular, there is an assumption governing the shape and type of aggregate latent demand functions. Latent demand functions relate the income of a country, city, state, household, or individual to realized consumption. Latent demand (often realized as consumption when an industry is efficient), at any level of the value chain, takes place if an equilibrium in realized. For firms to serve a market, they must perceive a latent demand and be able to serve that demand at a minimal return. The single most important variable determining consumption, assuming latent demand exists, is income (or other financial resources at higher levels of the value chain). Other factors that can pivot or shape demand curves include external or exogenous shocks (i.e., business cycles), and or changes in utility for the product in question.

Ignoring, for the moment, exogenous shocks and variations in utility across countries, the aggregate relation between income and consumption has been a central theme in economics. The figure below concisely summarizes one aspect of problem. In the 1930s, John Meynard Keynes conjectured that as incomes rise, the average propensity to consume would fall. The average propensity to consume is the level of consumption divided by the level of income, or the slope of the line from the origin to the consumption function. He estimated this relationship empirically and found it to be true in the short-run (mostly based on cross-sectional data). The higher the income, the lower the average propensity to consume. This type of consumption function is labeled “A” in the figure below (note the rather flat slope of the curve). In the 1940s, another macroeconomist, Simon Kuznets, estimated long-run consumption functions which indicated that the marginal propensity to consume was rather constant (using time series data across countries). This type of consumption function is show as “B” in the figure below (note the higher slope and zero-zero intercept). The average propensity to consume is constant.

Is it declining or is it constant? A number of other economists, notably Franco Modigliani and Milton Friedman, in the 1950s (and Irving Fisher earlier), explained why the two functions were different using various assumptions on intertemporal budget constraints, savings, and wealth. The shorter the time horizon, the more consumption can depend on wealth (earned in previous years) and business cycles. In the long-run, however, the propensity to consume is more constant. Similarly, in the long run, households, industries or countries with no income eventually have no consumption (wealth is depleted). While the debate surrounding beliefs about how income and consumption are related and interesting, in this study a very particular school of thought is adopted. In particular, we are considering the latent demand for phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3) across some 230 countries. The smallest have fewer than 10,000 inhabitants. I assume that all of these counties fall along a “long-run” aggregate consumption function. This long-run function applies despite some of these countries having wealth, current income dominates the latent demand for phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3). So, latent demand in the long-run has a zero intercept. However, I allow firms to have different propensities to consume (including being on consumption functions with differing slopes, which can account for differences in industrial organization, and end-user preferences).

Given this overriding philosophy, I will now describe the methodology used to create the latent demand estimates for phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3). Since ICON Group has asked me to apply this methodology to a large number of categories, the rather academic discussion below is general and can be applied to a wide variety of categories, not just phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3).

Step 1. Product Definition and Data Collection

Any study of latent demand across countries requires that some standard be established to define “efficiently served”. Having implemented various alternatives and matched these with market outcomes, I have found that the optimal approach is to assume that certain key countries are more likely to be at or near efficiency than others. These countries are given greater weight than others in the estimation of latent demand compared to other countries for which no known data are available. Of the many alternatives, I have found the assumption that the world’s highest aggregate income and highest income-per-capita markets reflect the best standards for “efficiency”. High aggregate income alone is not sufficient (i.e., China has high aggregate income, but low income per capita and can not assumed to be efficient). Aggregate income can be operationalized in a number of ways, including gross domestic product (for industrial categories), or total disposable income (for household categories; population times average income per capita, or number of households times average household income per capita). Brunei, Nauru, Kuwait, and Lichtenstein are examples of countries with high income per capita, but not assumed to be efficient, given low aggregate level of income (or gross domestic product); these countries have, however, high incomes per capita but may not benefit from the efficiencies derived from economies of scale associated with large economies. Only countries with high income per capita and large aggregate income are assumed efficient. This greatly restricts the pool of countries to those in the OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development), like the United States, or the United Kingdom (which were earlier than other large OECD economies to liberalize their markets).

The selection of countries is further reduced by the fact that not all countries in the OECD report industry revenues at the category level. Countries that typically have ample data at the aggregate level that meet the efficiency criteria include the United States, the United Kingdom and in some cases France and Germany.

Latent demand is therefore estimated using data collected for relatively efficient markets from independent data sources (e.g. Euromonitor, Mintel, Thomson Financial Services, the U.S. Industrial Outlook, the World Resources Institute, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, various agencies from the United Nations, industry trade associations, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Bank). Depending on original data sources used, the definition of “phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3)” is established. In the case of this report, the data were reported at the aggregate level, with no further breakdown or definition. In other words, any potential product or service that might be incorporated within phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3) falls under this category. Public sources rarely report data at the disaggregated level in order to protect private information from individual firms that might dominate a specific product-market. These sources will therefore aggregate across components of a category and report only the aggregate to the public. While private data are certainly available, this report only relies on public data at the aggregate level without reliance on the summation of various category components. In other words, this report does not aggregate a number of components to arrive at the “whole”. Rather, it starts with the “whole”, and estimates the whole for all countries and the world at large (without needing to know the specific parts that went into the whole in the first place).

Step 2. Filtering and Smoothing

Based on the aggregate view of phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3) as defined above, data were then collected for as many similar countries as possible for that same definition, at the same level of the value chain. This generates a convenience sample of countries from which comparable figures are available. If the series in question do not reflect the same accounting period, then adjustments are made. In order to eliminate short-term effects of business cycles, the series are smoothed using an 2 year moving average weighting scheme (longer weighting schemes do not substantially change the results). If data are available for a country, but these reflect short-run aberrations due to exogenous shocks (such as would be the case of beef sales in a country stricken with foot and mouth disease), these observations were dropped or “filtered” from the analysis.

Step 3. Filling in Missing Values

In some cases, data are available for countries on a sporadic basis. In other cases, data from a country may be available for only one year. From a Bayesian perspective, these observations should be given greatest weight in estimating missing years. Assuming that other factors are held constant, the missing years are extrapolated using changes and growth in aggregate national income. Based on the overriding philosophy of a long-run consumption function (defined earlier), countries which have missing data for any given year, are estimated based on historical dynamics of aggregate income for that country.

Step 4. Varying Parameter, Non-linear Estimation

Given the data available from the first three steps, the latent demand in additional countries is estimated using a “varying-parameter cross-sectionally pooled time series model”. Simply stated, the effect of income on latent demand is assumed to be constant across countries unless there is empirical evidence to suggest that this effect varies (i.e., . the slope of the income effect is not necessarily same for all countries). This assumption applies across countries along the aggregate consumption function, but also over time (i.e., not all countries are perceived to have the same income growth prospects over time and this effect can vary from country to country as well). Another way of looking at this is to say that latent demand for phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3) is more likely to be similar across countries that have similar characteristics in terms of economic development (i.e., African countries will have similar latent demand structures controlling for the income variation across the pool of African countries).

This approach is useful across countries for which some notion of non-linearity exists in the aggregate cross-country consumption function. For some categories, however, the reader must realize that the numbers will reflect a country’s contribution to global latent demand and may never be realized in the form of local sales. For certain country-category combinations this will result in what at first glance will be odd results. For example, the latent demand for the category “space vehicles” will exist for “Togo” even though they have no space program. The assumption is that if the economies in these countries did not exist, the world aggregate for these categories would be lower. The share attributed to these countries is based on a proportion of their income (however small) being used to consume the category in question (i.e., perhaps via resellers).

Step 5. Fixed-Parameter Linear Estimation

Nonlinearities are assumed in cases where filtered data exist along the aggregate consumption function. Because the world consists of more than 200 countries, there will always be those countries, especially toward the bottom of the consumption function, where non-linear estimation is simply not possible. For these countries, equilibrium latent demand is assumed to be perfectly parametric and not a function of wealth (i.e., a country’s stock of income), but a function of current income (a country’s flow of income). In the long run, if a country has no current income, the latent demand for phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3) is assumed to approach zero. The assumption is that wealth stocks fall rapidly to zero if flow income falls to zero (i.e., countries which earn low levels of income will not use their savings, in the long run, to demand phosphorus trichloride (chloride, 100 percent PCl3)). In a graphical sense, for low income countries, latent demand approaches zero in a parametric linear fashion with a zero-zero intercept. In this stage of the estimation procedure, low-income countries are assumed to have a latent demand proportional to their income, based on the country closest to it on the aggregate consumption function.

Step 6. Aggregation and Benchmarking

Based on the models described above, latent demand figures are estimated for all countries of the world, including for the smallest economies. These are then aggregated to get world totals and regional totals. To make the numbers more meaningful, regional and global demand averages are presented. Figures are rounded, so minor inconsistencies may exist across tables.

Step 7. Latent Demand Density: Allocating Across Cities

With the advent of a “borderless world”, cities become a more important criteria in prioritizing markets, as opposed to regions, continents, or countries. This report also covers the world’s top 2000 cities. The purpose is to understand the density of demand within a country and the extent to which a city might be used as a point of distribution within its region. From an economic perspective, however, a city does not represent a population within rigid geographical boundaries. To an economist or strategic planner, a city represents an area of dominant influence over markets in adjacent areas. This influence varies from one industry to another, but also from one period of time to another.

Similar to country-level data, the reader needs to realize that latent demand allocated to a city may or may not represent real sales. For many items, latent demand is clearly observable in sales, as in the case for food or housing items. Consider, again, the category “satellite launch vehicles.” Clearly, there are no launch pads in most cities of the world. However, the core benefit of the vehicles (e.g. telecommunications, etc.) is “consumed” by residents or industries within the world’s cities. Without certain cities, in other words, the world market for satellite launch vehicles would be lower for the world in general. One needs to allocate, therefore, a portion of the worldwide economic demand for launch vehicles to regions, countries and cities. This report takes the broader definition and considers, therefore, a city as a part of the global market. I allocate latent demand across areas of dominant influence based on the relative economic importance of cities within its home country, within its region and across the world total. Not all cities are estimated within each country as demand may be allocated to adjacent areas of influence. Since some cities have higher economic wealth than others within the same country, a city’s population is not generally used to allocate latent demand. Rather, the level of economic activity of the city vis-à-vis others.

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2006-2011 World Outlook for Sodium Chlorate (100 Percent NaClO3)

WHAT IS LATENT DEMAND AND THE P.I.E.?

The concept of latent demand is rather subtle. The term latent typically refers to something that is dormant, not observable, or not yet realized. Demand is the notion of an economic quantity that a target population or market requires under different assumptions of price, quality, and distribution, among other factors. Latent demand, therefore, is commonly defined by economists as the industry earnings of a market when that market becomes accessible and attractive to serve by competing firms. It is a measure, therefore, of potential industry earnings (P.I.E.) or total revenues (not profit) if a market is served in an efficient manner. It is typically expressed as the total revenues potentially extracted by firms. The “market” is defined at a given level in the value chain. There can be latent demand at the retail level, at the wholesale level, the manufacturing level, and the raw materials level (the P.I.E. of higher levels of the value chain being always smaller than the P.I.E. of levels at lower levels of the same value chain, assuming all levels maintain minimum profitability).

The latent demand for sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3) is not actual or historic sales. Nor is latent demand future sales. In fact, latent demand can be lower either lower or higher than actual sales if a market is inefficient (i.e., not representative of relatively competitive levels). Inefficiencies arise from a number of factors, including the lack of international openness, cultural barriers to consumption, regulations, and cartel-like behavior on the part of firms. In general, however, latent demand is typically larger than actual sales in a country market.

For reasons discussed later, this report does not consider the notion of “unit quantities”, only total latent revenues (i.e., a calculation of price times quantity is never made, though one is implied). The units used in this report are U.S. dollars not adjusted for inflation (i.e., the figures incorporate inflationary trends) and not adjusted for future dynamics in exchange rates (i.e., the figures reflect average exchange rates over recent history). If inflation rates or exchange rates vary in a substantial way compared to recent experience, actually sales can also exceed latent demand (when expressed in U.S. dollars, not adjusted for inflation). On the other hand, latent demand can be typically higher than actual sales as there are often distribution inefficiencies that reduce actual sales below the level of latent demand.

As mentioned in the introduction, this study is strategic in nature, taking an aggregate and long-run view, irrespective of the players or products involved. If fact, all the current products or services on the market can cease to exist in their present form (i.e., at a brand-, R&D specification, or corporate-image level) and all the players can be replaced by other firms (i.e., via exits, entries, mergers, bankruptcies, etc.), and there will still be an international latent demand for sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3) at the aggregate level. Product and service offering details, and the actual identity of the players involved, while important for certain issues, are relatively unimportant for estimates of latent demand.

THE METHODOLOGY

In order to estimate the latent demand for sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3) on a worldwide basis, I used a multi-stage approach. Before applying the approach, one needs a basic theory from which such estimates are created. In this case, I heavily rely on the use of certain basic economic assumptions. In particular, there is an assumption governing the shape and type of aggregate latent demand functions. Latent demand functions relate the income of a country, city, state, household, or individual to realized consumption. Latent demand (often realized as consumption when an industry is efficient), at any level of the value chain, takes place if an equilibrium in realized. For firms to serve a market, they must perceive a latent demand and be able to serve that demand at a minimal return. The single most important variable determining consumption, assuming latent demand exists, is income (or other financial resources at higher levels of the value chain). Other factors that can pivot or shape demand curves include external or exogenous shocks (i.e., business cycles), and or changes in utility for the product in question.

Ignoring, for the moment, exogenous shocks and variations in utility across countries, the aggregate relation between income and consumption has been a central theme in economics. The figure below concisely summarizes one aspect of problem. In the 1930s, John Meynard Keynes conjectured that as incomes rise, the average propensity to consume would fall. The average propensity to consume is the level of consumption divided by the level of income, or the slope of the line from the origin to the consumption function. He estimated this relationship empirically and found it to be true in the short-run (mostly based on cross-sectional data). The higher the income, the lower the average propensity to consume. This type of consumption function is labeled “A” in the figure below (note the rather flat slope of the curve). In the 1940s, another macroeconomist, Simon Kuznets, estimated long-run consumption functions which indicated that the marginal propensity to consume was rather constant (using time series data across countries). This type of consumption function is show as “B” in the figure below (note the higher slope and zero-zero intercept). The average propensity to consume is constant.

Is it declining or is it constant? A number of other economists, notably Franco Modigliani and Milton Friedman, in the 1950s (and Irving Fisher earlier), explained why the two functions were different using various assumptions on intertemporal budget constraints, savings, and wealth. The shorter the time horizon, the more consumption can depend on wealth (earned in previous years) and business cycles. In the long-run, however, the propensity to consume is more constant. Similarly, in the long run, households, industries or countries with no income eventually have no consumption (wealth is depleted). While the debate surrounding beliefs about how income and consumption are related and interesting, in this study a very particular school of thought is adopted. In particular, we are considering the latent demand for sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3) across some 230 countries. The smallest have fewer than 10,000 inhabitants. I assume that all of these counties fall along a “long-run” aggregate consumption function. This long-run function applies despite some of these countries having wealth, current income dominates the latent demand for sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3). So, latent demand in the long-run has a zero intercept. However, I allow firms to have different propensities to consume (including being on consumption functions with differing slopes, which can account for differences in industrial organization, and end-user preferences).

Given this overriding philosophy, I will now describe the methodology used to create the latent demand estimates for sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3). Since ICON Group has asked me to apply this methodology to a large number of categories, the rather academic discussion below is general and can be applied to a wide variety of categories, not just sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3).

Step 1. Product Definition and Data Collection

Any study of latent demand across countries requires that some standard be established to define “efficiently served”. Having implemented various alternatives and matched these with market outcomes, I have found that the optimal approach is to assume that certain key countries are more likely to be at or near efficiency than others. These countries are given greater weight than others in the estimation of latent demand compared to other countries for which no known data are available. Of the many alternatives, I have found the assumption that the world’s highest aggregate income and highest income-per-capita markets reflect the best standards for “efficiency”. High aggregate income alone is not sufficient (i.e., China has high aggregate income, but low income per capita and can not assumed to be efficient). Aggregate income can be operationalized in a number of ways, including gross domestic product (for industrial categories), or total disposable income (for household categories; population times average income per capita, or number of households times average household income per capita). Brunei, Nauru, Kuwait, and Lichtenstein are examples of countries with high income per capita, but not assumed to be efficient, given low aggregate level of income (or gross domestic product); these countries have, however, high incomes per capita but may not benefit from the efficiencies derived from economies of scale associated with large economies. Only countries with high income per capita and large aggregate income are assumed efficient. This greatly restricts the pool of countries to those in the OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development), like the United States, or the United Kingdom (which were earlier than other large OECD economies to liberalize their markets).

The selection of countries is further reduced by the fact that not all countries in the OECD report industry revenues at the category level. Countries that typically have ample data at the aggregate level that meet the efficiency criteria include the United States, the United Kingdom and in some cases France and Germany.

Latent demand is therefore estimated using data collected for relatively efficient markets from independent data sources (e.g. Euromonitor, Mintel, Thomson Financial Services, the U.S. Industrial Outlook, the World Resources Institute, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, various agencies from the United Nations, industry trade associations, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Bank). Depending on original data sources used, the definition of “sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3)” is established. In the case of this report, the data were reported at the aggregate level, with no further breakdown or definition. In other words, any potential product or service that might be incorporated within sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3) falls under this category. Public sources rarely report data at the disaggregated level in order to protect private information from individual firms that might dominate a specific product-market. These sources will therefore aggregate across components of a category and report only the aggregate to the public. While private data are certainly available, this report only relies on public data at the aggregate level without reliance on the summation of various category components. In other words, this report does not aggregate a number of components to arrive at the “whole”. Rather, it starts with the “whole”, and estimates the whole for all countries and the world at large (without needing to know the specific parts that went into the whole in the first place).

Step 2. Filtering and Smoothing

Based on the aggregate view of sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3) as defined above, data were then collected for as many similar countries as possible for that same definition, at the same level of the value chain. This generates a convenience sample of countries from which comparable figures are available. If the series in question do not reflect the same accounting period, then adjustments are made. In order to eliminate short-term effects of business cycles, the series are smoothed using an 2 year moving average weighting scheme (longer weighting schemes do not substantially change the results). If data are available for a country, but these reflect short-run aberrations due to exogenous shocks (such as would be the case of beef sales in a country stricken with foot and mouth disease), these observations were dropped or “filtered” from the analysis.

Step 3. Filling in Missing Values

In some cases, data are available for countries on a sporadic basis. In other cases, data from a country may be available for only one year. From a Bayesian perspective, these observations should be given greatest weight in estimating missing years. Assuming that other factors are held constant, the missing years are extrapolated using changes and growth in aggregate national income. Based on the overriding philosophy of a long-run consumption function (defined earlier), countries which have missing data for any given year, are estimated based on historical dynamics of aggregate income for that country.

Step 4. Varying Parameter, Non-linear Estimation

Given the data available from the first three steps, the latent demand in additional countries is estimated using a “varying-parameter cross-sectionally pooled time series model”. Simply stated, the effect of income on latent demand is assumed to be constant across countries unless there is empirical evidence to suggest that this effect varies (i.e., . the slope of the income effect is not necessarily same for all countries). This assumption applies across countries along the aggregate consumption function, but also over time (i.e., not all countries are perceived to have the same income growth prospects over time and this effect can vary from country to country as well). Another way of looking at this is to say that latent demand for sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3) is more likely to be similar across countries that have similar characteristics in terms of economic development (i.e., African countries will have similar latent demand structures controlling for the income variation across the pool of African countries).

This approach is useful across countries for which some notion of non-linearity exists in the aggregate cross-country consumption function. For some categories, however, the reader must realize that the numbers will reflect a country’s contribution to global latent demand and may never be realized in the form of local sales. For certain country-category combinations this will result in what at first glance will be odd results. For example, the latent demand for the category “space vehicles” will exist for “Togo” even though they have no space program. The assumption is that if the economies in these countries did not exist, the world aggregate for these categories would be lower. The share attributed to these countries is based on a proportion of their income (however small) being used to consume the category in question (i.e., perhaps via resellers).

Step 5. Fixed-Parameter Linear Estimation

Nonlinearities are assumed in cases where filtered data exist along the aggregate consumption function. Because the world consists of more than 200 countries, there will always be those countries, especially toward the bottom of the consumption function, where non-linear estimation is simply not possible. For these countries, equilibrium latent demand is assumed to be perfectly parametric and not a function of wealth (i.e., a country’s stock of income), but a function of current income (a country’s flow of income). In the long run, if a country has no current income, the latent demand for sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3) is assumed to approach zero. The assumption is that wealth stocks fall rapidly to zero if flow income falls to zero (i.e., countries which earn low levels of income will not use their savings, in the long run, to demand sodium chlorate (100 percent NaClO3)). In a graphical sense, for low income countries, latent demand approaches zero in a parametric linear fashion with a zero-zero intercept. In this stage of the estimation procedure, low-income countries are assumed to have a latent demand proportional to their income, based on the country closest to it on the aggregate consumption function.

Step 6. Aggregation and Benchmarking

Based on the models described above, latent demand figures are estimated for all countries of the world, including for the smallest economies. These are then aggregated to get world totals and regional totals. To make the numbers more meaningful, regional and global demand averages are presented. Figures are rounded, so minor inconsistencies may exist across tables.

Step 7. Latent Demand Density: Allocating Across Cities

With the advent of a “borderless world”, cities become a more important criteria in prioritizing markets, as opposed to regions, continents, or countries. This report also covers the world’s top 2000 cities. The purpose is to understand the density of demand within a country and the extent to which a city might be used as a point of distribution within its region. From an economic perspective, however, a city does not represent a population within rigid geographical boundaries. To an economist or strategic planner, a city represents an area of dominant influence over markets in adjacent areas. This influence varies from one industry to another, but also from one period of time to another.

Similar to country-level data, the reader needs to realize that latent demand allocated to a city may or may not represent real sales. For many items, latent demand is clearly observable in sales, as in the case for food or housing items. Consider, again, the category “satellite launch vehicles.” Clearly, there are no launch pads in most cities of the world. However, the core benefit of the vehicles (e.g. telecommunications, etc.) is “consumed” by residents or industries within the world’s cities. Without certain cities, in other words, the world market for satellite launch vehicles would be lower for the world in general. One needs to allocate, therefore, a portion of the worldwide economic demand for launch vehicles to regions, countries and cities. This report takes the broader definition and considers, therefore, a city as a part of the global market. I allocate latent demand across areas of dominant influence based on the relative economic importance of cities within its home country, within its region and across the world total. Not all cities are estimated within each country as demand may be allocated to adjacent areas of influence. Since some cities have higher economic wealth than others within the same country, a city’s population is not generally used to allocate latent demand. Rather, the level of economic activity of the city vis-à-vis others.

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Summary

Ittehad Chemicals Limited (ICL) is a Pakistani based chemical company, which is principally engaged in the development, manufacture, marketing and sale of basic inorganic chemicals that can be used in a broad range of applications. The products manufactured by the company find application in wide range of industries, namely the textiles, carpets, fertilizers, soaps and detergents, vegetable oil, banaspati ghee, paper and board, power generation, gas, petroleum, sugar and beverages industries. The major products of the company are the Caustic Soda, Chlorine, Sodium Hypochlorite, Hydrochloric Acid, Sulphuric Acid, Bleaching Earth and Zinc Sulphate.

Global Markets Direct, the leading business information provider, presents an in-depth business, strategic and financial analysis of Ittehad Chemicals Limited. The report provides a comprehensive insight into the company, including business structure and operations, executive biographies and key competitors. The hallmark of the report is the detailed strategic analysis and Global Markets Direct’s views on the company.

Scope

• The company’s strengths and weaknesses and areas of development or decline are analyzed. Financial, strategic and operational factors are considered.
• The opportunities open to the company are considered and its growth potential assessed. Competitive or technological threats are highlighted. 
• The report contains critical company information – business structure and operations, the company history, major products and services, key competitors, key employees and executive biographies, different locations and important subsidiaries.
• It provides detailed financial ratios for the past five years as well as interim ratios for the last four quarters.
• Financial ratios include profitability, margins and returns, liquidity and leverage, financial position and efficiency ratios.

Reasons to buy

• A quick “one-stop-shop” to understand the company. 
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• Get detailed information and financial & strategic analysis on companies operating in your industry.
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• Compare your company’s financial trends with those of your peers / competitors.
• Scout for potential acquisition targets, with detailed insight into the companies’ strategic, financial and operational performance.

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Pulp & Paper Chemicals forecasts for 2011 & 2016

US demand to reach $8.8 billion by 2011, US demand for pulp and paper chemicals is projected to reach 20 billion tons in 2011, valued at $8.8 billion. Growth will be supported by increases in paper and paperboard production, as well as the need to comply with stringent environmental standards. Commodity chemicals such as calcium carbonate and clays will continue to be the largest products (by quantity) consumed in the pulp and paper industry, where they are used as fillers and coating pigments. A significant volume of other chemicals, including pulping chemicals such as caustic soda, sizing agents such as starches, and bleaching agents such as sodium chlorate, are also utilized in pulp and paper operations. Best opportunities are expected in the large paper mills market, although improved prospects are also expected for paperboard mills, and to a lesser degree in pulp mills and deinking plants.

Specialty additives will be fastest growing category

Through 2011, specialty additives are expected to record the fastest growth. Among the specialty additives, products such as biocides and deposit control agents, and retention and drainage aids, should continue to experience the fastest gains. Growth will be based on the increasing use of recycled fibers and reuse of water, which put greater strain on machinery and equipment. Further supporting demand are ongoing efforts to reduce mill emissions as well as efforts to reduce production costs by using higher filler loading levels, which require the use of greater quantities of specialty additives.

Fillers, pigments to remain largest product segment

Fillers and coating pigments will continue to be the largest pulp and paper chemical segment, and although growth will remain strong in terms of volume of these chemicals used in pulp and paper mills, most consist of low-value commodity chemicals and market value growth will be meager. Over the last decade, calcium carbonates (especially precipitated varieties have taken significant market share from clays in paper and board fillers and coatings, so that they have now surpassed clays in this segment. This trend should continue, supported by greater demand for brighter printing and writing papers, which can be achieved with calcium carbonates at a lower cost than competing products, such as titanium dioxide or kaolin clay.

Paper markets to offer best growth opportunities

Paper mills, the largest end-user of pulp and paper chemicals, are expected to record the fastest growth in chemical demand through 2011. More specifically, the printing and writing papers, and tissue paper markets will provide the best opportunities. Demand for pulp and paper chemicals in these markets will result from increases in production of these paper grades, as well as stricter requirements, such as increased brightness and printability for printing and writing papers, and increased softness and wet strength for tissue paper. In addition, the use of recycled fibers and other environmental issues will encourage a shift in product mix to higher value chemicals.

Study coverage

It presents historical demand data for the years 1996, 2001 and 2006 plus forecasts for 2011 and 2016 by pulp and paper chemical type and market. The study also considers market environment factors, evaluates company market share and profiles 39 industry competitors.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Executive Summary
1 Summary Table

Market Environment
General
Macroeconomic Overview
Population & Demographics
Consumer Spending Overview
Paper & Paperboard Industry Overview
Supply & Demand
Paper
Paperboard
Fiber Trends
Wood Pulp
Waste Paper & Board
Cost Inputs
Historical Trends
Pricing Trends
Environmental & Regulatory Factors
International Activity & Foreign Trade

LIST OF TABLES & CHARTS:

1 Macroeconomic Indicators 2 Demographic Indicators
3 Consumer Spending Activity
4 Paper & Paperboard Supply & Demand 5 Paper Supply & Demand
6 Paperboard Supply & Demand
7 Fiber Consumption
8 Wood Pulp Supply & Demand
9 Waste Paper & Board Consumption
10 Pulp & Paper Chemicals Historical
Trends, 1996-2006
Cht Pulp & Paper Chemicals Historical
Trends, 1996-2006
11 Pricing Trends

MARKET OVERVIEW

General
Pulping Technology
Wood Pulp Production
Waste Paper Pulping & Deinking
Bleaching Technology
Papermaking Technology

LIST OF TABLES & CHARTS:

1 Pulp & Paper Chemical Demand
Cht Pulp & Paper Chemical Demand, 2006 Cht Pulp & Paper Production Flowchart
FILLERS & Coating Pigments
General
Calcium Carbonate
Precipitated Calcium Carbonate
Ground Calcium Carbonate
Clays
Titanium Dioxide
Talc
Other Fillers & Coating Pigments
Market Share

LIST OF TABLES & CHARTS:

1 Fillers & Coating Pigments Demand in
Pulp & Paper Production
Cht Fillers & Coating Pigments Demand, 2006
2 Calcium Carbonate Demand in
Pulp & Paper Production
3 Clay Demand in Pulp & Paper Production 4 Titanium Dioxide Demand in
Pulp & Paper Production
5 Talc Demand in Pulp & Paper Production 6 Other Fillers & Pigments Demand in Pulp
& Paper Production
7 Fillers & Coating Pigments Sales
by Company, 2006
Cht Fillers & Coating Pigments
Market Share, 2006
PULPING & DEINkING Chemicals
General
Pulping Chemicals
Caustic Soda
Lime
Sulfuric Acid
Soda Ash
Sulfur Dioxide
Sodium Sulfites
Sulfur
Sodium Sulfate
Other Pulping Chemicals
Deinking & Recycling Chemicals
Aluminum Sulfate
Sodium Silicates
Polyaluminum Chloride
Other Deinking & Recycling Chemicals
Market Share

LIST OF TABLES & CHARTS:

1 Pulping & Deinking Chemical Demand 2 Pulping Chemical Demand
Cht Pulping Chemical Demand, 2006
3 Caustic Soda Demand in Pulping
4 Lime Demand in Pulping
5 Sulfuric Acid Demand in Pulping
6 Soda Ash Demand in Pulping
7 Sulfur Dioxide Demand in Pulping
8 Sodium Sulfite Demand in Pulping
9 Sulfur Demand in Pulping
10 Sodium Sulfate Demand in Pulping
11 Other Pulping Chemical Demand
12 Deinking & Recycling Chemical Demand
in Pulp & Paper Production
Cht Deinking & Recycling Chemical
Demand, 2006
13 Aluminum Sulfate Demand in
Deinking & Recycling
14 Sodium Silicate Demand in
Deinking & Recycling
15 Polyaluminum Chloride Demand in
Deinking & Recycling
16 Other Deinking & Recycling
Chemical Demand
17 Pulping & Deinking Chemical Sales
by Company, 2006
Cht Pulping & Deinking Chemicals
Market Share, 2006
Specialty PULP & Paper additives
General
Sizing Agents
Surface Sizing Agents
Starches
Other Surface Sizes
Internal Sizing Agents
Rosin
Alkenyl Succinic Anhydride
Alkyl Ketene Dimer
Coating Polymers
Styrene-Butadiene Latex
Other Coating Polymers
Dry Strength Additives
Starches
Other Dry Strength Additives
Wet Strength Resins
Brighteners & Dyestuff
Biocides & Other Deposit Control Agents
Retention & Drainage Aids
Defoamers
Market Share

LIST OF TABLES & CHARTS:

1 Specialty Additives Demand in
Pulp & Paper Production
Cht Specialty Pulp & Paper Additives
Demand, 2006
2 Sizing Agents Demand in Pulp
& Paper Production
3 Surface Sizing Agents Demand in
Pulp & Paper Production
4 Internal Sizing Agents Demand in
Pulp & Paper Production
5 Coating Polymers Demand in
Pulp & Paper Production
6 Dry Strength Additives Demand in
Pulp & Paper Production
7 Wet Strength Resins Demand in
Pulp & Paper Production
8 Brighteners & Dyestuff Demand in
Pulp & Paper Production
9 Biocides & Other Deposit Control Agents
Demand in Pulp & Paper Production
10 Retention & Drainage Aids Demand in
Pulp & Paper Production
11 Defoamers Demand in Pulp
& Paper Production

12 Specialty Additives Sales by Company, 2006
Cht Specialty Pulp & Paper Additives
Market Share, 2006
Bleaching Chemicals
General
Sodium Chlorate
Oxygen & Ozone
Hydrogen Peroxide
Other Bleaching Chemicals
Market Share
LIST OF TABLES & CHARTS:
1 Bleaching Chemical Demand in
Pulp & Paper Production
Cht Bleaching Chemical Demand, 2006
2 Sodium Chlorate Demand in Pulp Bleaching
3 Oxygen & Ozone Demand in Pulp Bleaching
4 Hydrogen Peroxide Demand
in Pulp Bleaching
5 Other Pulp Bleaching Chemical Demand 6 Bleaching Chemical Sales by Company, 2006
Cht Pulp & Paper Bleaching Chemicals
Market Share, 2006
Demand By END-USER
General
Paper Mills
Printing & Writing Papers
Tissue Paper
Newsprint
Packaging & Industrial Papers
Paperboard Mills
Pulp Mills & Deinking Plants

LIST OF TABLES & CHARTS:

1 Pulp & Paper Chemical Demand
by End-User
Cht Pulp & Paper Chemical Demand
by End-User, 2006
2 Paper Mills Chemical Demand
3 Printing & Writing Papers Chemical Demand
4 Tissue Paper Chemical Demand
5 Newsprint Chemical Demand
6 Packaging & Industrial Papers
Chemical Demand
7 Paperboard Mills Chemical Demand
8 Pulp Mills & Deinking Plants
Chemical Demand

Industry Structure
General
Industry Concentration & Market Share Industry Restructuring
Cooperative Agreements
Marketing & Distribution
Research & Development
Competitive Strategies
LIST OF TABLES & CHARTS:
1 Pulp & Paper Chemical Sales
by Company, 2006
Cht Pulp & Paper Chemicals Market Share, 2006
2 Selected Acquisitions & Divestitures
3 Selected Cooperative Agreements

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Understanding Chiral Technologies

Some of the fastest growing new drugs today are two mirror-image isomers. Chemically, they are single enantiomers, with each of their molecules being one half of a pair of mirror-image isomers. As drugs, single enantiomers often exhibit greater potency and cause fewer side effects than do more conventional drug molecules, which may be chiral but are often equal-parts mixtures of both enantiomers. As a result, chiral technology - the process of synthesizing or isolating chiral molecules and their single enantiomers, has become big business for a legion of catalyst developers and custom chemical manufacturers.

Global revenues from chiral technology will soar from $6.63 billion in 2000 to $16.03 billion in 2007, growing at a compound annual rate of 13.4% during that period.

Approximately 80% of all products currently in development for the pharmaceutical industry are based on chiral building blocks, according to Karlheinz Drauz, vice president for technology and R&D management in the fine chemicals business unit of Degussa AG in Hanau-Wolfgang, Germany. Many single-enantiomer chiral drugs have recently hit the market. Among the more successful ones are AstraZeneca’s stomach acid remedy Nexium, GlaxoSmithKline’s anti-anxiety agent Paxil, and Merck’s asthma drug Singulair.

This report analyzes the technology involved in the chiral processes, cost of the technology, worldwide sales, the different chiral models, major players in the industry, and the basics of the chiral industry. Market overview, market statistics, information for end-users, and much more is included in this report.

Table of Contents

Executive Summary 4
What is the Chiral Concept? 5
Introduction 5
Types of Chiral Technology 5
R&D 7
Advancement of Molecules and Other Developments 8
Transformation of Chiral Chemistry into Clinical Cure 8

Industry Overview 10
Chiral Technology Markets 10
Chiral Market Growth Forecasts and Analysis 10
Worldwide Sales of Single Isomer Drugs 11
Worldwide Market Presence of Single Isomer Drugs 11
Competitive Scenario 12

Different Chiral Models for Adaptable Markets 13
Issues with Intellectual Property 16
Bringing the Molecule to a Commercial Scale – Barriers to the Process 17
Role of the Pharmaceutical Industry in Promoting Chiral Technologies 19
Market Analysis by End-Users 21
Agrochemicals 21
Pharmaceuticals 21
Flavors and Fragrances, and Other Industries 21
Outlook for Chiral Technology Industry 22
Major Market Leaders 23
Altus Pharmaceuticals 23
Bachem 24
Callery Chemical Company 25
Cambrex Corporation 26
Chemi SpA 27
Degussa 27
DSM 29
Great Lakes Fine Chemicals 30
Johnson Matthey Plc 31
Oxford Asymmetry International 33
Sepracor Inc 33
Synetix 34
Synthon Chiragenics Corporation 35
Appendix 37
Glossary 38

List of Figures
Figure 1: Global Chiral Technology Markets 10
Figure 2: Worldwide Sales of Single Isomer Drugs 11
Figure 3: Global Market Presence of Single Isomer Drugs 11
Figure 4: Methods of Obtaining Chirally Pure Compounds 37

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Independent 5 year Chemicals industry forecasts for India.
Original Chemicals market research and Chemicals sector trend analysis for the India Chemicals industry.
Competitive intelligence, Indian Chemicals company rankings and SWOT analyses on international and domestic Chemicals companies in  India.

The India Chemicals Report has been researched at source, and features latest-available data and It’s independent 5-year industry forecasts for basic and speciality chemicals, covering industry value, production, demand, imports, exports and investment, and backed by It’s 5-year macroeconomic forecasts and assumptions.

Basic Chemicals – Covering inorganic and organic feedstock such as ethylene, propylene, ammonia, benzene and chlorine, and inorganic chemical raw materials including sulphuric acid, hydrochloric acid, nitric acid, soda ash and caustic soda.
Fine & Speciality Chemicals – Covering pesticides, dyestuffs, pigments, coatings, printing inks and reagents, photo-sensitive and magnetic recording materials, food and feed additives, adhesives, surfactants, catalysts and speciality additives, carbon fibre and pharmaceuticals.The Reports also analyse recent and pending changes in the regulatory environment, and profile leading multinational and national chemicals companies, their main products, investments, market share, partners and regional expansion strategies.

Indian Chemicals Reports provide industry professionals and strategists, sector analysts, trade associations and regulatory bodies with independent forecasts and competitive intelligence on the Indian chemicals industry.

Key Benefits of Report

Benchmark It’s Independent 5-year Chemicals Industry Forecasts on India to test other views – a key input for successful budgetary and planning in the Indian strategic Chemicals market.
Target Business Opportunities & Risks in the Indian Chemicals Sector through our reviews of latest industry trends, regulatory changes and major deals, projects and investments in India.
Exploit the Latest Competitive Indian Chemicals Intelligence & company SWOTS on your competitors and peers through company rankings by sales, market share and ownership structure – includes multi-national and national companies in India.
Coverage

Executive Summary
Summary of It’s key industry forecasts, views and trend analysis, covering basic chemicals, fine and speciality chemicals markets, regulatory changes, major investments, projects and company developments.

Market Overview
Structure, size and value of industry sector; overview of industry landscape and key players; assessment of business operating environment and latest regulatory developments.

It 5-Year Industry Forecast
Historic data series and 5-year forecasts to end-2011 for all key industry indicators, including industry value, production, demand, sales, imports and exports and total investments, supported by macroeconomic forecasts and assumptions. Key products covered:

Basic Chemicals – Covering inorganic and organic feedstock such as ethylene, propylene, ammonia, benzene and chlorine, and inorganic chemical raw materials including sulphuric acid, hydrocholoric acid, nitric acid, soda ash and caustic soda.

Fine & Speciality Chemicals – Covering pesticides, dyestuffs, pigments, coatings, printing inks and reagents, photo-sensitive and magnetic recording materials, food and feed additives, adhesives, surfactants, catalysts and speciality additives, carbon fibre and pharmaceuticals.

It Macroeconomic 5-Year Forecast
It forecasts for all headline macroeconomic indicators, including real GDP growth, inflation, fiscal balance, trade balance, current account and external debt.

Competitive Landscape and Rankings
Comparative company analyses and rankings by US$ sales, % market share, employee size, registration date and ownership structure.

Company Profiles and SWOTS
Company profiles, including SWOT analyses, senior executives and full contact details, business activity, products and services, foreign direct investments and projects.

Executive Summary

Industry Overview

The Indian chemicals industry started developing after the country’s independence in 1947. The industry has since become a major contributor to the economic and industrial development of the country. The industry is characterised by fragmentation, with the top-10 players contributing only 38% of sales and 45% of profit. The sector’s performance in the quarter ended September 2005 was relatively good in comparison to the previous corresponding quarter. In July-September 2005, sales of the chemicals and fertiliser industry, excluding petroleum refinery and pharmaceutical, increased 14.1% year-on-year (y-oy) and were worth more than INR300bn (US$6.55bn). Further, the chemical industry’s net profit increased 18% y-o-y to INR21.96bn (US$480.13mn).

Company Developments

In October 2006, Singapore-based Sumitomo Corporation decided to invest in Indian company Visen Industries, with an aim to increase the sales of chemicals for emulsion use in India and the Middle East. Further, in September 2006, an Israeli producer of fertiliser and speciality chemicals Israel Chemicals Limited (ICL) signed a new potash supply agreement with its customers in India and China. In August 2006, Kerala Minerals and Metals (KMM), an Indian company, received an awaited environmental approval from the Indian Ministry of Environment and Forests for an INR8bn (US$174.98mn) expansion at its titanium dioxide unit at Chavara, Kerala, India.

Projects And Expansions

Indian Oil Corporation (IOC) outlined its plans to invest INR150bn (US$3.28bn) in the proposed chemical hub at Haldia, West Bengal, over the next five to eight years (2006-2011/2014). In September 2006, India-based Shalimar Paints outlined its plans to establish a manufacturing base with an installed capacity of 1,000 kilolitres per month in south India. The company is still deciding on whether to acquire an existing plant or opt for a greenfield venture. Further, Gwalior Chemical Industries Limited (GCIL) outlined its plans to establish new plants for manufacturing benzyl esters, acid chlorides, and viscose dye pigments at Nagda in Madhya Pradesh and Ankleshwar in Gujarat.

Industry Outlook

The plastics industry is increasing at a rate of 14% per annum, and consumption is expected to be more than 12mn tonnes per annum (tpa) by 2010. Further, according to India’s Union Minister for chemicals, fertiliser and steel, the demand for fertiliser is forecast to rise to 35.9mn tonnes by 2010. As such, the government plans to restart eight public sector fertiliser plants in the next three years to 2009.

Table of Contents:

Chapter 1 - Executive Summary
Industry Overview
Advantage India
Company Developments
Global Expansion Plans
Indian Chemicals Industry SWOT
Chapter 2 - Market Overview
Opening Up Of Economy Drives Growth
Increasing FDI
Chapter 3 - Market Structure
Basic Chemicals
Inorganic Chemicals
Organic Chemicals
Fine And Speciality Chemicals
Paints And Varnishes
Adhesives
Dyes & Dye Intermediates
Knowledge Chemicals
Agrochemicals
Biotechnology
Table: Consumption of Biotech Products
Major Indicators
Table: Indian Chemicals Industry Statistics
Capacity
Capacity Utilisation
International Trade
Industry Characteristics
Significant Position In Manufacturing Sector
Table: Industry Characteristics Matrix
Business Environment
Infrastructural Bottlenecks
Chapter 4 - Industry Trends And Developments
MoU Between Indian And US Chemicals Associations
Contract Research And Manufacturing Services
Company News
Impact Of 2006-2007 Budget
Introduction Of Value Added Tax
Projects And Expansions
Mergers, Acquisitions And Finance
Chapter 5 - Industry Forecast Scenario
Table: Indian Chemicals Industry – Historical Data & Forecasts
Chapter 6 - Macroeconomic Forecast
Mild Slowdown
Table: GDP And Population
Chapter 7 - Company Monitor
IFFCO
Gujarat Narmada Valley Fertilisers Company
Ciba Specialty Chemicals (India)
Clariant Chemicals India
Bayer CropScience (Formerly Bayer India)
Rallis
ICI India
BASF India
Chapter 8 - It Forecast Modelling
How we generate our industry forecasts
Chemicals & Petrochemicals Industry
Cross checks

To know more and to buy a copy of your report feel free to visit: http://www.bharatbook.com/Market-Research-Reports/Chemicals-Report-India-.html

Or

Contact us at:
Bharat Book Bureau
Tel: +91 22 2757 8668
Fax: +91 22 2757 9131
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Website: www.bharatbook.com
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Independent 5 year Chemicals industry forecasts for China.
Original Chemicals market research and Chemicals sector trend analysis for the China Chemicals industry.
Competitive intelligence, Chinese Chemicals company rankings and SWOT analyses on international and domestic Chemicals companies in  China.

The China Chemicals Report has been researched at source, and features latest-available data and It’s independent 5-year industry forecasts for basic and speciality chemicals, covering industry value, production, demand, imports, exports and investment, and backed by It’s 5-year macroeconomic forecasts and assumptions.

Basic Chemicals – Covering inorganic and organic feedstock such as ethylene, propylene, ammonia, benzene and chlorine, and inorganic chemical raw materials including sulphuric acid, hydrochloric acid, nitric acid, soda ash and caustic soda.
Fine & Speciality Chemicals – Covering pesticides, dyestuffs, pigments, coatings, printing inks and reagents, photo-sensitive and magnetic recording materials, food and feed additives, adhesives, surfactants, catalysts and speciality additives, carbon fibre and pharmaceuticals.The Reports also analyse recent and pending changes in the regulatory environment, and profile leading multinational and national chemicals companies, their main products, investments, market share, partners and regional expansion strategies.

Chinese Chemicals Reports provide industry professionals and strategists, sector analysts, trade associations and regulatory bodies with independent forecasts and competitive intelligence on the Chinese chemicals industry.

Key Benefits of Report

Benchmark It’s Independent 5-year Chemicals Industry Forecasts on China to test other views – a key input for successful budgetary and planning in the Chinese strategic Chemicals market.
Target Business Opportunities & Risks in the Chinese Chemicals Sector through our reviews of latest industry trends, regulatory changes and major deals, projects and investments in China.
Exploit the Latest Competitive Chinese Chemicals Intelligence & company SWOTS on your competitors and peers through company rankings by sales, market share and ownership structure – includes multi-national and national companies in China.
Coverage

Executive Summary
Summary of It’s key industry forecasts, views and trend analysis, covering basic chemicals, fine and speciality chemicals markets, regulatory changes, major investments, projects and company developments.

Market Overview
Structure, size and value of industry sector; overview of industry landscape and key players; assessment of business operating environment and latest regulatory developments.

It 5-Year Industry Forecast
Historic data series and 5-year forecasts to end-2011 for all key industry indicators, including industry value, production, demand, sales, imports and exports and total investments, supported by macroeconomic forecasts and assumptions. Key products covered:

Basic Chemicals – Covering inorganic and organic feedstock such as ethylene, propylene, ammonia, benzene and chlorine, and inorganic chemical raw materials including sulphuric acid, hydrocholoric acid, nitric acid, soda ash and caustic soda.

Fine & Speciality Chemicals – Covering pesticides, dyestuffs, pigments, coatings, printing inks and reagents, photo-sensitive and magnetic recording materials, food and feed additives, adhesives, surfactants, catalysts and speciality additives, carbon fibre and pharmaceuticals.

It Macroeconomic 5-Year Forecast
It forecasts for all headline macroeconomic indicators, including real GDP growth, inflation, fiscal balance, trade balance, current account and external debt.

Competitive Landscape and Rankings
Comparative company analyses and rankings by US$ sales, % market share, employee size, registration date and ownership structure.

Company Profiles and SWOTS
Company profiles, including SWOT analyses, senior executives and full contact details, business activity, products and services, foreign direct investments and projects.

Executive Summary

Market Overview

Robust domestic demand coupled with cost advantages over industrialised Western nations has made China a key consumer as well as supplier of chemical products. It is currently the world’s third-largest consumer of chemicals. The country is greatly reliant on chemicals imports however, as demand is expected to climb further. China’s chemical industry remains lucrative, especially after the country’s entry to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in 2001. Multinationals and domestic companies are establishing extensive production capacities, driven by investments through co-operative ventures. The chemical industry remains fragmented, with domestic companies accounting for 40% of the market.

Development Of Chemical Industrial Parks

China Petroleum and Chemical Industry Association (CPCIA) has issued guidelines to facilitate development of the country’s chemical industrial parks. These parks are expected to contribute towards improving the industry’s investment climate by introducing foreign investment, upgrading technology and developing regional economies as well as facilitating management systems and operations. The move is also expected to streamline China’s existing chemicals industry by centralising production. China’s policies on development of chemical parks also aim to increase the percentage of speciality and finished materials produced within the country.

Industry Developments

In September 2006, Fujian Jianyang Municipal Government, Sinochem Shanghai and Hangzhou Kings Industrial Company signed an agreement to jointly build a fluoride chemicals base at Jianyang in the Fujian province. Germany’s Bayer is planning to construct a chlorine recycling plant at Caojing, Shanghai, and also intends to expand the capacity at its newly built polycarbonate plant at the same site. In the same month, Netherlands-based Royal DSM revealed its intent to build a new facility at its Jiangyin site, in Jiangsu province, for production of high viscosity grades of polyamide 6 (PA6). A joint venture between US-based Dow Corning and Germany-based Wacker-Chemie started constructing a new US$600mn chemicals complex in the eastern Chinese city of Zhangjiagang.

Industry Forecast

The Chinese chemical industry is forecast to grow at 5% annually to US$186.5bn in 2006, to US$195.8bn in 2007 and to US$205.2bn in 2008. By 2008, the number of chemical units in the country is likely to be 13,549 from 13,282 in 2004. Existing multinationals are likely to expand capacities to meet the increasing demand and fresh investment is expected to come in as more multinationals establish operations in China.

Table of Contents:

Chapter 1 - Executive Summary
Market Overview
Development Of Chemical Industrial Parks
Industry Developments
Industry Forecast
China Chemicals Industry SWOT
China Business Environment SWOT
Chapter 2 - Market Overview
Table: China’s Output of Main Chemical Products in May 2006
Table: China’s Output of Main Chemical Products (January-May 2006)
Base Chemicals
Speciality Chemicals
Development Of Chemical Industrial Parks
Chapter 3 - Market Structure
Business Environment
Acquisitions And Finance
Projects And Expansions
Policy Environment
Chapter 4 - Industry Forecast Scenario
Table: China Chemicals Market Value: Historical Development And Forecasts
Chapter 5 - Macroeconomic Forecast
Table: China Macroeconomic Data And Forecast
Chapter 6 - Company Profiles
Sinochem Corporation
China National Chemicals Corporation (CNNC)
Bayer (China) Ltd
Dow Chemical
BASF AG
Chapter 7 - It Forecast Modelling
How we generate our industry forecasts
Chemicals & Petrochemicals Industry
Cross checks

To know more and to buy a copy of your report feel free to visit: http://www.bharatbook.com/Market-Research-Reports/Chemicals-Report-China-.html

Or

Contact us at:
Bharat Book Bureau
Tel: +91 22 2757 8668
Fax: +91 22 2757 9131
Email: info@bharatbook.com
Website: www.bharatbook.com
Blog: http://bharatbookresearch.blogspot.com

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