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Recycled Resin Prices—September 2004

Recycled Resins Stable But Poised for Increases
Summer often brings a lull in recycled resin pricing. This season is no exception—except for polystyrene, where virgin prices are soaring and taking recycled prices with them.

By Debbie Galante Block

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RECYCLED RESIN PRICES


PET Bottles (Clean)
Clear Post-Consumer
Green Post-Consumer

HDPE (Clean)
Natural Post-Consumer
Mixed Colors

Polystyrene
Post-Consumer
High Impact
  Black
  Natural
General Purpose
  Black
  Natural

Polypropylene
Post-Industrial
Post-Consumer

Polyethylene Film
Post-Consumer
  Stretch
  Printed/Mixed
Post-Industrial
  Printed
  Not Printed

PVC
Post-Industrial
  Flexible
  Rigid
Pellets
¢/lb

55-57
44-48


40-43
32-33




43-46
50-55

38-40
43-45


21-27
17-19



28
13

20
24



32-40
50-66
Flake
¢/lb

44-45
38-40


25-28
23-27




39-41
  —

30
38-40


17-18
  —



  —
  —

  —
  —



  —
  —

R-HDPE going up
Natural recycled HDPE prices have stabilized since May. Mixed-color prices also stabilized but the spread between the two has narrowed. Reprocessors say prices bumped up a little in early summer but are now back down to spring levels. Says one recycler, “Some bigger players have been trying to keep prices stable, but the feedstocks are now forcing prices up.”

An increase of a penny or two is expected for mixed-color this month because of limited availability. “We pretty much match virgin price changes—about a 45-day lag behind. As long as virgin materials stay expensive and there is low availability of wide-spec, it’s going to keep our prices up,” one recycler explains.

R-PP steady for now
Demand for recycled PP is strong, but prices have been holding steady this quarter, helped by a seasonal dip in automotive demand. “A lot of automotive facilities are shut down in the summer, but they are only about 20% of our business. PP availability is tightening up even without them. If automotive plants were running, I don’t know what we’d be doing,” says one reprocessor. The consensus is that recycled prices are likely to rise in the near future.

R-PET high but stable
Pricing for recycled PET has been stable for the last couple of months, though clear material experienced a 1¢/lb increase. Most suppliers don’t expect much change, owing to heavy demand—even if virgin prices start to drop. In the fall, prices often come down a little bit after a summer of heavy beverage consumption. “This year, I would expect we’ll be at this same level, give or take a cent, into September,” one source says.”

R-PS rising
In the last quarter, recycled PS prices have gone up 3¢ to 4¢ cents for black and as much as 7¢/lb for natural. Suppliers have their eyes fixed on virgin prices, where the big question is whether double-digit increases announced by some suppliers will actually take effect.

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