The FINANCIAL — The chemical industry is continuing to outsource its distribution to third-party distribution providers, according to a new report by BCG.
Between 2008 and 2012, the worldwide chemical distribution market grew approximately 9 percent per year, in nominal terms, to roughly €165 billion. Such growth outpaces the expansion in chemical consumption worldwide, at a nominal 8 percent per year over the same time period, reaching €2,560 billion in 2012, according to the report titled The Growing Opportunity for Chemical Distributors.
“Chemical distributors are growing faster than the overall industry, mainly due to two factors: increased outsourcing among suppliers and greater value-added services offered by distributors,” said Udo Jung, a BCG senior partner and coauthor of the report. “Both are driven by industry trends, and neither is likely to change for the foreseeable future,” Jung added.
Overall, the chemical industry is large, fragmented, and diverse, with more than 100,000 products across a range of technical categories, including petrochemicals, solvents, polymers, and customized specialty chemicals. The size of the customer base for these products varies widely, as do regional and national requirements and logistical challenges driven by the chemical products themselves. As a result, manufacturers face significant complexity in getting their products to customers, and third-party distributors are increasingly considered a vital element of their go-to-market strategy, according to the report.
Many producers are developing “preferred partnerships” with key distributors—an approach that allows producers to expand into new markets. Among these markets, China is now the largest, worth about €35 billion. Among third-party distributors, Brenntag, Univar, and Nexeo Solutions were the three largest in 2011, with a combined global market share of 12.5 percent, according to BCG.
While third-party distribution has grown, there is still considerable room for expansion, as roughly €165 billion comprises just 10 percent of the overall chemical market. “Going forward,” said Stefan Scholz, a BCG project leader and coauthor of the report, “We expect the real growth rate in the chemical distribution market to slow from 7 percent to a stable 6 percent per year within the next five years, mainly due to a weaker underlying economic situation that will reduce chemical consumption,” he said. In addition, the report notes that distributors will continue integrating along the value chain, in order to provide more value-added services for customers and further reduce complexity for chemical producers.
To succeed in this environment, distributors need to strengthen their competitive position by expanding into new geographic regions and building their segment-specific expertise through acquisitions. Scale counts, and small and mid-sized players will only succeed by adopting a niche strategy and focusing on either a specific local territory or within a narrow band of industry expertise, said the report.
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