Polymer prices in India have increased in the past week with firmer demand, as more downstream converters and consumers manufacture goods ahead of the Diwali festival holiday being celebrated on 14 November.
Polyethylene and polypropylene (PP) import offers from the Middle East were $20-30/t higher than the previous week on the back of continued firm demand.
Consumers are looking to recover losses incurred during March-April Covid-19 lockdowns, keeping their factories open to leverage on the strong festive demand. But Diwali celebrations are expected to be muted this year with the Covid-19 pandemic. Demand is still expected to remain firm as people continue buying household goods and packaged food while they celebrate from home.
India's rupee was valued around 74 to the US dollar today with no significant movements since Joe Biden became US president-elect. But trade flows are expected to alter when Biden takes office, with US-China trade possibly opening up.
Indian low-density polyethylene (LDPE) film prices were assessed at $1,100-1,130/t cfr on 5 November, with linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) film assessed at $930-950/t cfr, high-density polyethylene (HDPE) film at $1,010-1,030/t cfr and PP raffia at $1,050-1,070/t cfr, according to Argus data. LDPE, LLDPE and PP raffia rose by $30/t against the previous week, while HDPE film rose by $20/t.

