Rubber Journal Asia Glove Sector
Buoyant prospects and overcoming challenges Industry developments offer Malaysian glove
discouraging new rubber plantations and replanting, according to the Association of Natural Rubber Producing Countries (ANRPC). China represents 40% of global natural rubber consumption; 80% of which, it imports. Thus, this will result in supplies becoming tighter from 2020 onwards, the group said, and not the oversupply scenario as pulling down rubber prices. This oversupply of rubber is “only on paper”, according to Sheela Thomas, Secretary-General of ANRPC, speaking at the 2016 China Rubber Conference held recently in Qingdao. Malaysia, the fifth largest rubber producer and third largest exporter of natural rubber, is witnessing a slowdown in rubber planting as local tappers have lost confidence in the sector due to the almost 70% price drop of natural rubber. As such, local plantations are switching to oil palm as a cash crop. Late last year, the Malaysian Rubber Glove Manufacturers Association (MARGMA) alerted the industry on a price increase in gloves. It said that rubber glove producers needed to make up for the adjustments in manufacturing costs, following the 17.2% increase in a tariff on natural gas that took effect in January. The glove manufacturing process requires the use of natural gas, and thus it accounts for 10% of total production costs. The projected cost increase is about RM0.40 to RM0.70 cents per 1,000 units of nitrile gloves and RM0.30-50 cents for latex gloves. Rather than impacting their earnings, Malaysian glove makers pass the additional costs on to their customers.
makers to expand amid the challenges, while the clampdown on powdered gloves by the US FDA will see a switch to non-powdered ones, says Angelica Buan in this report.
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lobal demand for rubber gloves is strong. Indian market research firm Koncept Analytics says that with improved healthcare awareness, progressive emphasis on healthcare regulations and rising expenditure in healthcare, the demand for gloves in emerging markets will peak. The demand for rubber gloves will be further driven by other factors including the possibility of governments in developing countries making the use of gloves in the healthcare sector compulsory; recovery of the global economy and consequent rise in the living standards, among others. The global rubber gloves market is poised to grow at a CAGR of around 10% in the next five years to reach approximately US$6.4 billion by 2020, according to a report by India-based Accuray Research. This uptrend could conjecture that the rubber gloves sector is undisrupted by looming global factors. Yet, as in all other industry sectors that are continuously growing, challenges are not far behind. Malaysia has kept its lead as the world’s top source for medical gloves (examination and surgical gloves), with its roster of rubber glove players like Top Glove Corporation, Hartalega Holdings, Kossan Rubber Industries, Supermax Corporation and Latexx Manufacturing, serving half the global demand for gloves. Maintaining a buoyant supply and demand is not the only deal breaker for the Malaysian glove sector to remain globally competitive. Factors such as low rubber output are pressing onto glove makers’ profit margins as well. Likewise, developments pertaining to regulations, wage hikes and duty adjustments are just some of the many intrinsic aspects that the glove industry is facing.
Minimum wages; levy hike for foreign workers eanwhile, the Malaysian government has implemented a new minimum wage scale and increased tariff rates on foreign workers. Effective 18 March, the new levy rates for the First Category, which covers the manufacturing, construction and services sectors, is RM1,850, up by RM600; and the Second Category, covering plantations and agriculture, is at RM640, up by RM50, according to Malaysia-based Affin Hwang Investment Bank. With the increase in remuneration, industries, especially the labour-intensive ones, are advised to undertake corresponding measures like shifting to automation. Affin Hwang states that labour costs account between 9-13% of the operating expenses; and the impact of the new levy hike in earnings is estimated at 0.5% to 1.5%. While the rubber glove sector is labour-intensive, the impact on higher remuneration is minimal. The Malaysian Rubber Board (MRB) says that the local glove manufacturing industry has already started
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No surplus: tight rubber supply ow oil prices and lower demand due to a slowdown in economies from large buyers, especially China, are triggering a decline in rubber prices, and therefore,
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