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Braskem's Mexico Unit Is Missing The Plastics Rally

Published May 20, 2026
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Summary:
  • Braskem Idesa, the Mexico joint venture of Brazilian petrochemical giant Braskem, posted a negative recurring EBITDA of $15 million in the first quarter.
  • Ethane supply from Pemex fell to 14,800 barrels per day, and imported ethane dropped to 17,800 barrels per day from 29,400 in the prior quarter.
  • Mexico polyethylene sales fell 37%, and analysts say Braskem's stake in the unit will likely be diluted to fix the balance sheet.

Plastic prices are climbing. That should be good news for plastic makers.

Braskem Idesa is not seeing any of it. The cash is not there to buy the raw input it needs to make plastic.

How A Plant Runs Out Of Raw Material

Braskem Idesa uses a gas called ethane to make polyethylene. Polyethylene is the plastic in things like bags and milk jugs.

The Mexico unit has two ethane sources. Pemex pipes some in, and the rest is shipped in from abroad.

In the first quarter, both sources shrank at once. Pemex flows dropped to 14,800 barrels a day from 15,900. Imports fell from 29,400 to 17,800 barrels a day.

The drop in imports was not a market shortage. It was the unit's own cash squeeze. The plant could not pay for what it normally takes in.

The plant ran below full speed in a strong market, with Mexico polyethylene sales falling 37%.

The cycle: less ethane in means less plastic out. Less plastic out means less cash in. Less cash in means even less ethane next quarter. That is the loop the Mexico unit is stuck in.

Pemex has been cutting back ethane flows for over a year. That has been a slow drag on the plant. The cash crunch sits on top of that.

Pemex is Mexico's state oil firm.

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The Parent Has Its Own Bill

Braskem ended the first quarter with $1.1 billion in cash. That counts a standby credit line set to expire in December 2026.

Net debt outside Mexico was $8.5 billion at the end of March, with about $100 million in bond interest due by mid-year.

The takeaway: the parent is stretched and the joint venture is starved. That has ICIS analysts now expecting a Braskem Idesa restructuring, one that would dilute Braskem's stake for fresh cash.

What To Watch

Braskem's Brazil ops did well in the first quarter. Group EBITDA was up 76% from the fourth quarter of 2025.

Core Brazil use is up, while Mexico and the green polyethylene line are still in the red.

Any restructuring of Braskem Idesa would change who owns what slice of the upside. That upside comes when ethane returns and the plant runs at full speed.

Three signals to track:

  • Pemex ethane flows in the next quarterly report.
  • Braskem Idesa standby line talks, which the team has tied to a wider capital plan.
  • Equity raise or stake sale terms if a restructuring is set.

A plastic maker is missing a strong market because it cannot fund its own raw input.

Braskem trades as BAK on the NYSE.

Braskem stock has lagged Brazil's main index this year. A clean fix to the Mexico unit would close that gap.

Investors will be watching the next quarterly report for any sign of relief.

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