PARTS UPSTREAM // Hormuz Supply Chain Tracker
YELLOW — Elevated Watch
Week 11 of Closure
Updated May 11, 2026
Market Conditions
Upstream commodity pricing, feedstock indicators, and export pull signals that drive the OEM exposure assessments. These are the structural inputs — when these indicators shift, the OEM risk profiles on the Overview page change with them.
Brent Crude
$101–104/bbl
Brent ~$104 · WTI ~$98 · May 11
Dubai/Oman Crude
$169–182
Asia premium
Strait of Hormuz
CLOSED
Since Feb 28, 2026
Global Ethylene Lost
12%
~23M tonnes ann. · S&P Global
NA PP (Apr 2026)
$1.40/kg
+12.9% MoM · IMARC Group
Global PP Pricing — April 2026
Surging
Europe
$2.05/kg
+30% YTD · S&P Global/ChemOrbis
North America
$1.40/kg
Rising · IMARC Group
NE Asia
$1.23/kg
Feedstock-constrained
India
$1.17/kg
+0.9% QoQ (understated)
NA Export Pull Risk
Accelerating
PE Cumulative Increase
$0.50/lb
Apr–May · LYB Q1 earnings
NA Cracker Utilization
~95%
LYB Q1 · Near max capacity
PE Orders vs Pre-War
+20%
April · LYB Q1 earnings
HDPE Availability
Super Scarce
Plastics Technology · May
LYB Q1: 20%+ of global PE/PP capacity impacted by conflict. NA producers maximizing rates and redirecting to export. HDPE injection and HMW grades scarce despite near-capacity production. Domestic tightening follows export pull. LYB CEO: disruption "not to be measured in quarters" — logistics normalization 9–12 months.
Signal Framework
● GREEN — Normal

Balanced supply/demand. Adequate inventory. Stable pricing. Routine monitoring.

● YELLOW — Elevated ← Current

Tightening supply. Prices firming. Export restrictions. Feedstock constraints. Weekly monitoring.

● RED — Critical

Allocation. Force majeure. Supply rationing. Lead times extending. Asian cracker shutdowns confirmed.

Canadian Market — OEM Parts Exposure Summary
49 Models Assessed

Risk level reflects replacement-parts supply exposure for vehicles sold in Canada, based on assembly location, feedstock dependence, and confirmed upstream disruption. Tier definitions and model-level detail available on the Overview page.

OEM GroupRisk LevelPrimary DriverHighest-Exposure Models (Canada)Lower-Exposure Models (Canada)
Hyundai High 77% Gulf naphtha. 4 of 5 Korean resin producers in force majeure. Kona EV, IONIQ 6 — Canada-only, no U.S. parts fallback Tucson, Santa Fe, IONIQ 5 — NA-assembled, Mobis AL/GA bumpers
Kia High Same as Hyundai. 4 Canada-only models. EV3, EV4, EV5, Niro PHEV — Canada-only, no U.S. parts fallback Sportage, Forte — NA-assembled
Genesis Elevated 100% Korea-assembled. Parts in both markets. GV70, GV80, G70, G80, G90 — all Korea-built
Subaru High 100% Japan-assembled for Canadian market. No NA fallback. Forester, Outback, Crosstrek, WRX, BRZ, Solterra — all Japan
Mazda High Most models Japan-assembled. Japanese production cuts confirmed. CX-5, CX-30, CX-70, CX-90, Mazda3, MX-5 — Japan CX-50 — Alabama JV
Mitsubishi Elevated Japan-assembled. Smaller Canadian fleet. Outlander PHEV, Eclipse Cross, RVR — Japan
Toyota / Lexus Lower Canadian assembly (Cambridge, ON). Japan-sourced lamps/ADAS remain watch items. Japan-built Lexus sedans, specialty models RAV4, Corolla, Lexus RX — Canada-assembled
Honda / Acura Lower Canadian assembly (Alliston, ON). Same watch items as Toyota. Japan-built Acura sedans, specialty models Civic, CR-V — Canada-assembled
Nissan Mixed High-volume NA-assembled; specialty models Japan-dependent. ARIYA, Z, LEAF — Japan Rogue, Pathfinder, Kicks — NA-assembled
BMW Mixed Cost surge, not supply cessation. SUVs NA-assembled; sedans European. 3 Series, 5 Series, 7 Series, i4, iX — Europe X3, X5, X6, X7 — Spartanburg, SC
Mercedes-Benz Mixed Same as BMW. GLC is highest-volume Tier 1 model. C-Class, E-Class, S-Class, GLC — Europe GLE, GLS — Tuscaloosa, AL
VW Lower High-volume models NA/Mexico-assembled. Golf, ID.4 — Europe Atlas, Tiguan, Jetta, Taos — Chattanooga / Puebla
Audi Mixed Q5 Mexico-assembled. Sedans and other SUVs European. A5, A6, Q7, Q8, e-tron — Europe Q5 — San José Chiapa, MX
Porsche High 100% European-assembled. No NA production. 911, Cayenne, Macan, Taycan, Panamera — all Europe
MINI High 100% European-assembled. Cooper, Countryman — Oxford / Leipzig
Ford Lower NGL-based feedstock. NA-assembled. Aluminium exposure on F-150. F-150, Escape, Bronco, Explorer — NA plants
GM Lower NGL-based feedstock. NA-assembled. Sierra, Equinox, Blazer — NA plants incl. Oshawa
Stellantis Lower Core brands NA-assembled. Italian brands are the exception. Alfa Romeo Stelvio/Giulia/Tonale, Fiat 500e — Europe RAM, Jeep, Dodge, Chrysler — NA plants incl. Windsor/Brampton
Tesla Mixed Fremont/Austin models insulated. Shanghai Model 3 variants exposed. Model 3 (Shanghai variants) Model Y, Model S, Model X — Fremont / Austin

Assembly location is a reasonable exposure proxy but is not proof of replacement-parts sourcing. Lamps, ADAS sensors, and electronic modules may be imported regardless of assembly location. Risk level reflects plastics/petrochemical exposure; aluminium and paint exposure is cross-cutting (see Non-Plastics).

What This Tracks
Every plastic component in a collision repair begins as a hydrocarbon feedstock. The Strait of Hormuz closure disrupts crude oil and condensate that feed the global petrochemical chain. This table maps each stage from raw input through to the part a technician installs.
Feedstock
Resin / Polymer
Collision Part Categories
Current Status
Naphtha
Crude oil fraction. Gulf = primary source for Asia and Europe.
Polypropylene (PP)
PP-TPO, PP-talc, PP copolymer
Bumper covers, fascias, fender liners, fan shrouds, instrument panel frames, interior trim panels
Korea FM declared. Europe +30% YTD. Japan production cuts confirmed.
Naphtha
→ Ethylene → Benzene → BPA
Polycarbonate (PC)
PC, PC-ABS blends
Headlamp lenses, taillamp lenses, instrument clusters, ADAS sensor housings
Jubail PPE facility struck — PCB prices +40%. Korea FM across producers.
Naphtha
→ Ethylene → Styrene
ABS
Acrylonitrile-Butadiene-Styrene
Grilles, mirror housings, console components, pillar trim, emblems, chrome-plated trim
Global price-hike target. Seoyon E-Hwa and Plakor dependent on allocation.
Naphtha
→ Ethylene + Propylene
EPDM Rubber
Ethylene-Propylene-Diene Monomer
Weather strips, door seals, window seals, A/C hoses, radiator hoses, brake hoses
YNCC + LG Chem rationing both inputs. Hwaseung R&A near-monopoly for HMG.
Naphtha
→ Toluene → TDI / MDI
Polyurethane (PU)
Flexible and rigid foams
Seat foam, headrests, armrests, headliner substrates, acoustic insulation pads
Hanwha TotalEnergies FM on TDI/MDI precursors (Apr 17, 2026).
Naphtha
→ Paraxylene → PTA
PET / PBT
Polyester fibres, engineering plastics
Headliner fabric, seatbelt webbing, wire harness connectors, sensor mounting brackets
Hanwha FM on paraxylene. PX/PTA supply chain under stress.
Naphtha
→ Methanol → Formaldehyde
POM (Acetal)
Delrin, Celcon
Clips, fasteners, fuel system parts, door handle mechanisms, gear assemblies
Upstream pressure building. Not yet in allocation.
Naphtha
→ MMA monomer
Acrylic (PMMA)
Polymethyl methacrylate
Taillamp lenses, light guides, reflector optics, instrument panel covers
SL Corporation dependent. Korean supply under FM conditions.
Ethane / NGL
Natural gas liquids. NA domestic supply.
PE / PP (NA-cracked)
NGL-based polyethylene, polypropylene
NA-molded bumpers, liners, shields (Mobis AL/GA, Magna, Flex-N-Gate, Plastic Omnium)
Structurally insulated. NA feedstock independent of Gulf crude.
Compound exposure: A single collision repair can require parts from 3–5 resin families simultaneously. A bumper cover (PP) + headlamp (PC) + weather strip (EPDM) + grille (ABS) means one repair touches four disrupted supply chains. The repair cycle is constrained by whichever part arrives last.
90-Day Early Warning Probability
23–27% OEM replacement parts · Canadian collision · highest-exposure models

Estimated probability that the current upstream petrochemical disruption transmits into material Canadian collision-repair parts availability or cost pressure within 90 days, for highest-exposure models (Korean third-party-manufactured lamps, trim, weather strips for Hyundai/Kia; Japan-sourced Subaru/Mazda parts). Derived from six-node conditional probability chain. Each node is a required transmission step; all must occur for Canadian claims impact to materialize.

NodeConditionBasisTypeEvidenceProb.
1 Strait remains closed 4+ more weeks Day 72 of closure. Project Freedom paused May 6 after 2 vessels transited. Trump rejected Iran counteroffer May 11 ("totally unacceptable"); 4th round of talks in Oman same day. HMM Namu (Korean vessel) confirmed struck by unidentified aerial objects — 26 Korean ships stranded. Diplomacy deteriorating; no near-term reopening pathway. Forecast Medium 90–95%
2 Asian crackers remain at reduced rates through June YNCC, LG Chem, Hanwha, Formosa all in declared force majeure. ICIS: 57% NE Asia cracker utilization forecast for May (from 83% pre-war → 63% Apr). Japan JPCA: record-low 68.6% cracker utilization in March, ethylene −38.8% YoY. Wanhua Chemical (China) FM on MDI/TDI. Shin-Etsu PVC cuts. Korean PE +200,000 won/ton with +800k signalled. Recycled plastic spot quadrupled to ~$1,600/ton globally. Fact / Forecast High / Med 90–95%
3 Resin allocation reaches automotive-grade polymers 71% of Korean plastics SMEs received supply-reduction notices (Korean Fed. Plastics Ind. Coops). FM declarations are total-output cuts, not grade-specific. No direct evidence yet of automotive-specific allocation or supplier notices. Mobis may secure informal allocation priority; third-party suppliers (SL Corp, Seoyon E-Hwa) lack this leverage. Inference Med / Low 75–85%
4 Parts manufacturers experience production shortfalls Conditional on Node 3. Smaller converters carry 2–4 weeks of resin inventory. Stocks procured pre-FM (before mid-March) approaching depletion. Mobis in-house inferred to have longer runway due to scale and contractual allocation priority — not confirmed. Inference Medium 75–85%
5 Finished parts pipeline to NA depletes Pipeline: Korean factory → logistics center → ocean freight (~4–6 wks via Cape of Good Hope) → Markham PDC → dealer. Estimated 8–14 weeks total buffer. Pre-FM parts still flowing. Gaps appear when April/May production (reduced volume) arrives as smaller shipments. Inference Medium 60–75%
6 Canadian claims indicators move Observable triggers: dealer ETA extensions on Tier 1 SKUs, Mobis allocation advisory or pricing bulletin, OEM-only authorization frequency, supplement stacking, rental-day increases. Low-volume SKUs (specific lamp assemblies, single-model weather strips) deplete first. Forecast Low / Med 55–70%
Combined (midpoints): 0.925 × 0.925 × 0.80 × 0.80 × 0.675 × 0.625 = 23.0%
Korean third-party parts (lamps, trim, weather strips) for Hyundai/Kia — highest exposure
Subaru/Mazda Japan-sourced: ~18–28% · Mobis in-house bumpers: ~12–18%
NA-assembled (Ford, GM, Stellantis): <10% supply disruption; cost escalation on specific resin-intensive categories (bumper covers, fender liners) estimated separately
≈ 23–27%

Moves the number up

Mobis Parts Canada issues allocation advisory or pricing bulletin. Canadian dealer lamp/mirror ETAs extend before bumper ETAs (confirms third-party rationing thesis). NA PP allocation language appears in TPE or StoneX newsletters. Strait closure extends past week 15 with no diplomatic progress. Anjeon valve fire recovery slips past June.

Moves the number down

Ceasefire holds and mine clearance begins. Korean crackers restore rates above 75%. Formosa Plastics lifts force majeure. Mobis confirms adequate finished-parts inventory through Q3. NA resin price increases plateau and export pull stabilizes. Toyota supplier June warnings prove manageable.

Asymmetric cost of error. False positive (escalate, nothing happens): management attention spent, framework validated as conservative. False negative (don't escalate, disruption hits): COVID-era claims cost dynamics repeat with weeks of unused lead time. At 23–27% probability against a material downside, the expected value of early monitoring activation justifies the investment.
Scope: OEM replacement parts only. Aftermarket collision parts (CAPA-certified, Taiwan/China-sourced) carry separate exposure — see Aftermarket Collision Parts Exposure below. When aftermarket supply tightens simultaneously (Formosa Plastics FM, Taiwan crackers at ~33%), the cost-control fallback for collision portfolios is reduced, compounding these OEM figures.

Method: six-node conditional probability chain. Each node assigned a range based on confirmed data (force majeures, cracker utilization rates, trade newsletter language) and structural estimates (pipeline buffer duration, allocation priority hierarchy). Each node tagged as FACT, INFERENCE, or FORECAST with an evidence-strength rating. Midpoints multiplied sequentially. This is a structured analytical judgment framework, not a statistical model. Probabilities are analyst estimates, not actuarial calculations, and should be updated weekly as new data arrives. Last updated: May 11, 2026.
180-Day Early Warning Probability
54–56% OEM replacement parts · Canadian collision · planning horizon

Estimated probability that the current upstream petrochemical disruption transmits into material Canadian collision-repair OEM parts availability or cost pressure within 180 days (through early November 2026). At this horizon, pipeline inventory buffers are fully consumed if upstream disruption persists, but resolution pathways become a meaningful factor. Calculated using scenario-weighted probability across three resolution trajectories rather than the sequential node chain used for the 90-day estimate.

ScenarioDescriptionTypeEvidenceScenario Prob.Impact if Occurs
A — Strait remains closed No reopening through November. Mine clearance not begun or incomplete. Pipeline buffers (8–14 weeks) fully consumed. Korean and Japanese crackers remain at reduced rates. NA export pull sustained. Trump rejected Iran counteroffer May 11. C&EN: industry expects "not normal for rest of 2026." Pentagon mine clearance estimates and self-reinforcing closure dynamics (insurance withdrawal, infrastructure damage) support extended timeline. Forecast Medium 55–65% 70–80%
B — Partial reopening U.S. convoy operations establish a corridor. Insurance markets partially re-enter. Shipping volumes recover to 40–60% of pre-war levels. Naphtha supply partially restores at elevated cost with logistical friction. Cost escalation is the dominant effect rather than availability cessation. Forecast Med / Low 25–30% 25–35%
C — Full resolution Ceasefire, mine clearance, and reopening within 6 months. Requires diplomatic breakthrough with no currently visible pathway — but timeframe allows for geopolitical shifts (Chinese mediation, domestic political pressure). Even with reopening, recovery timelines are 9–18 months for full normalization (Dow, ICIS), so residual disruption persists. Forecast Low 8–12% 10–15%
Weighted calculation: (0.60 × 0.75) + (0.275 × 0.30) + (0.10 × 0.125)
= 0.450 + 0.083 + 0.013
OEM replacement parts for highest-exposure models (Korean third-party, Japan-sourced Subaru/Mazda)
Mobis in-house bumpers: ~38–43% (lower impact probability per scenario due to allocation priority)
NA-assembled (Ford, GM, Stellantis): <15% supply disruption; cost escalation probability materially higher
≈ 54–56%
Why the 180-day number is materially higher than 90-day. At 90 days, the dominant uncertainty is whether inventory buffers hold — pipeline lag protects the Canadian market even while upstream conditions deteriorate. At 180 days, the buffers are consumed by definition if the strait remains closed. The question shifts from "does the disruption transmit?" to "does the disruption resolve before the buffer runs out?" — and the resolution pathways carry low evidence strength. Recovery timelines of 9–18 months (Dow, ICIS) mean even a resolution at month 4 doesn't normalize supply within the 180-day window.

Moves the number up

U.S.-Iran escalation beyond Hormuz (broader Gulf infrastructure strikes). Chinese petrochemical export controls tighten further. Korean government fails to secure alternative naphtha for Q3. Formosa Plastics shuts a cracker entirely. NA resin allocation language appears in formal supplier notices.

Moves the number down

Ceasefire holds with verified mine clearance. Korean crackers restore to 80%+ utilization. Japan secures sufficient alternative feedstock to maintain parts output. Formosa lifts FM and restores Taiwan cracker rates. NA resin pricing stabilizes with domestic allocation adequate.

Scope: OEM replacement parts only. Aftermarket exposure compounds these figures — see Aftermarket Collision Parts Exposure below.

Method: scenario-weighted probability model. Three resolution trajectories weighted by assessed likelihood, each with an independent impact probability if that scenario materializes. All scenario probabilities and impact assessments are analyst estimates tagged as FORECAST with evidence-strength ratings. Scenario weights must sum to 100%. Should be updated as geopolitical and market conditions evolve. Last updated: May 11, 2026.
OEM Replacement Parts Exposure
Strait of Hormuz closed since February 28, 2026. U.S. "Project Freedom" convoy operations launched May 4, paused May 6. Trump rejected Iran counteroffer May 11; 4th round Oman talks underway. Strait remains contested — ~5% of pre-war traffic. Industry consensus (Baker Hughes, Dallas Fed, C&EN): reopening unlikely before H2 2026; recovery "not normal for rest of 2026" even with immediate resolution. Exposure assessed by assembly location, known supplier geography, and North American parts pipeline availability. 49 models assessed across four OEM groups. Assembly location is a reasonable proxy but not proof of replacement-parts sourcing at the SKU level.
Hyundai · Kia · Genesis
Force majeure cascade · 6 Canada-only models with no U.S. parts fallback
Gulf Naphtha Dependence
77%
Korean petrochemical feedstock
Resin Producers in FM
4 of 5
YNCC, LG Chem, Hanwha, Lotte
SMEs with Supply Notices
71%
Korea Fed. Plastics Ind. Coops · Mar 2026
Canada Distribution
Single Point
Mobis Parts Canada · Markham, ON
Mitigating factor: Late-April reporting suggests Korea may have secured up to 90% of pre-war naphtha supply for May. YNCC operation rates reportedly improved to ~65% from ~55%. This creates uncertainty around severity and duration.
Vehicle Exposure
ModelAssemblyParts SourceNotesTier
Kia EV4Korea100% KoreaCanada-only. No U.S. parts pipeline.Tier 1
Kia EV5Korea100% KoreaCanada-exclusive. Not sold in U.S.Tier 1
Kia EV3Korea100% KoreaU.S. launch uncertain.Tier 1
Kia Niro PHEVKorea100% KoreaPHEV discontinued in U.S. for 2026.Tier 1
Hyundai Kona EVKorea100% KoreaElectric skipped in U.S. for 2026 MY.Tier 1
Hyundai IONIQ 6Korea100% KoreaDiscontinued in U.S.Tier 1
Genesis GV70/eKorea100% KoreaTop-selling Genesis in Canada (~5,355 units).Tier 2
Kia SoulKorea100% KoreaSold in both markets.Tier 2
Kia CarnivalKorea100% KoreaKorea-built for all markets.Tier 2
Hyundai TucsonMexicoBumpers: Mobis ALTop seller (~42K units). Some trim Korea-sourced.Tier 3
Kia SportageGeorgiaBumpers: Mobis GAMajor seller (~24K units).Tier 3
Hyundai Santa FeAlabamaBumpers: Mobis ALBumpers/IP from Mobis Alabama.Tier 3
Hyundai IONIQ 5GeorgiaBumpers: Mobis GABuilt at Metaplant Georgia.Tier 3

Full 34-model assessment available. Source: OEM disclosures, MarkLines, Mobis Parts Canada.

Third-Party Supplier Exposure
SupplierPartsKey ResinsHMG Dep.Risk
SL CorporationHeadlamps, rear lamps, mirrorsPC, PMMA, ABS~55% KoreaCritical
Seoyon E-HwaDoor trim, grilles, pillar trimPP, ABS, PC-ABS87%Critical
Hwaseung R&AAll weather strips, hosesEPDM, TPV, NBRMulti-OEMCritical
Hyundai MobisBumper fascias, IP framesPP-TPO, ABSCaptiveProtected
Binding-constraint hypothesis: Mobis molds bumpers in-house with priority resin allocation. Third-party suppliers (SL Corp, Seoyon, Hwaseung) lack that priority. Structural analysis suggests lamps, weather strips, and trim will ration before bumper covers. Working hypothesis, not confirmed.
Toyota · Honda · Nissan · Subaru · Mazda · Mitsubishi
Production cuts confirmed · Subaru & Mazda highest Canadian exposure
Gulf Naphtha Dep.
~42% ME
70%+ from Gulf. ~40% domestic.
Ethylene Crackers
Cuts Confirmed
Mitsubishi, Mitsui, Sumitomo, Idemitsu, Tosoh
Gov't Response
4-Month Supply
PM Takaichi · US, Algeria, Peru
Canadian Assembly
Toyota + Honda
Cambridge, Alliston (ON)
Mitigating factor: PM Takaichi has stated stable naphtha supply through year-end. Diversified procurement and Chinese petrochemical imports as stopgap. Government-secured naphtha does not confirm uninterrupted production of automotive-grade service-part SKUs.
Vehicle Exposure
BrandModelsAssemblyTier
SubaruForester, Outback, Crosstrek, WRX, BRZ, Solterra, Legacy, ImprezaJapan (all)Tier 1
MazdaCX-5, CX-30, CX-70, CX-90, Mazda3, MX-5JapanTier 1
MazdaCX-50Alabama (JV)Tier 3
MitsubishiOutlander PHEV, Eclipse Cross, RVRJapanTier 1
NissanARIYA, Z, LEAFJapanTier 1
NissanRogue, Pathfinder, KicksNA (TN, MS)Tier 3
ToyotaRAV4, CorollaCanada (ON)Tier 3
HondaCivic, CR-VCanada (ON)Tier 3

Tier 3 models may still have Japan-sourced lamps, ADAS sensors, and electronic modules. Source: OEM disclosures, MarkLines.

Tariff complication: Canada-U.S. countertariffs are forcing some OEMs to shift Canadian supply from U.S. plants to Japanese plants (e.g. Subaru Indiana → Japan). This increases Japan-dependence at the point of maximum feedstock stress. USMCA review deadline: July 2026.
BMW · Mercedes-Benz · VW · Audi · Porsche · MINI
Cost surge, not supply cessation · Strong NA SUV assembly footprint
European PP
+30% YTD
Spot USD · S&P Global/ChemOrbis
Gulf Naphtha Dep.
30–40%
European crackers · Octus, Mar 2026
Signal Type
Cost Surge
Not feedstock cutoff
FM Declared
LyondellBasell
Several EU polymer lines. Auto-grade unconfirmed.
Vehicle Exposure
BrandModelsAssemblyTier
Porsche911, Cayenne, Macan, Taycan, PanameraEurope (all)Tier 1
MINICooper, CountrymanEurope (all)Tier 1
BMW3 Series, 5 Series, 7 Series, i4, iXEuropeTier 1
Mercedes-BenzC-Class, E-Class, S-Class, GLCEuropeTier 1
BMWX3, X5, X6, X7, XMSpartanburg, SCTier 3
Mercedes-BenzGLE, GLS, GLE CoupeTuscaloosa, ALTier 3
VWAtlas, Tiguan, Jetta, TaosChattanooga / PueblaTier 3
AudiQ5San José Chiapa, MXTier 3

GLC currently European-assembled. MB announced Tuscaloosa production; timeline 'next few years.' Source: BMW Group, MB Group, VW Group, Audi MediaCenter.

Key structural difference: Current European signal is cost-led stress, not the feedstock cutoff seen in Korea or production cuts confirmed in Japan. Escalation conditions: European producers begin rationing, automotive-grade FM appears, or sustained energy curtailment forces additional cuts.
Ford · GM · Stellantis
Structurally insulated via NGL feedstock · Stellantis Italian brands are the exception
Feedstock
Ethane / NGL
Not Gulf naphtha dependent
NA PP Spot (30d)
▼ 1.1–1.2%
Plastics Exchange
Canadian Plants
5 Active
Oshawa, Windsor, Oakville, Brampton, CAMI

NA petrochemical producers crack ethane from natural gas liquids, not naphtha. This feedstock is domestically sourced and not routed through the Strait of Hormuz.

Exceptions
ExceptionDetailRisk
Stellantis Italian brandsAlfa Romeo (Stelvio, Giulia, Tonale), Fiat (500e) — European-assembled.Elevated
Tesla ShanghaiModel 3 variants from Shanghai Gigafactory.Elevated
ADAS sensors (all)Bosch, Continental, ZF, Mobileye. Global sourcing.Watch
Tariff disruptionCountertariffs may shift sourcing. USMCA review July 2026.Watch
ADAS · SRS · Wire Harness — Repair Stall Risk
Cross-Cutting

Not stockable. Not protected by NA assembly. These represent repair-stall risk independent of plastics exposure.

Wire Harnesses
Yazaki + Sumitomo
~50% global share
ADAS Sensors
Bosch · Continental · ZF
Model-specific, non-interchangeable
SRS Modules
Autoliv ~47%
ZF ~20% global share
Calibration Brackets
Single-Source
Per model. No alternatives.
Aftermarket Collision Parts Exposure

Taiwan produces ~80% of global aftermarket collision replacement parts and ~90% of aftermarket plastic parts (TAITRA/TABPA — production-base share). This is the cost-control lever — when aftermarket supply tightens, severity increases across the collision portfolio where aftermarket substitution is used.

Taiwan Aftermarket — Bumpers · Lamps · Fenders · Hoods · Grilles
FPCC force majeure active · ~33% cracker rate · Portfolio-wide severity risk
Formosa Petrochemical force majeure active. Taiwan's sole private naphtha cracker running at ~33% capacity (April). Refinery utilization ~43%. Feedstock output down ~50% in March. This creates a credible upstream feedstock risk for Taiwan's aftermarket parts manufacturers (Tong Yang, Depo, TYC, Eagle Eyes). Downstream Canadian impact not yet confirmed — validation needed at distributor level.
FPCC Cracker Rate (Apr)
~33%
Naphtha cracking specifically
FPCC Refinery (Apr)
~43%
Overall refinery utilization
Taiwan AM Global Share
~80%
Collision replacement production
Taiwan Plastic AM Share
~90%
Bumper covers, fascias, grilles
Part Category Risk
CategoryKey ResinTaiwan ShareAM-to-OEM DeltaRisk
Bumper CoversPP, TPOVery high (~90% of plastic AM)40–70%Highest
HeadlampsPC, PMMA + PP housingVery high (Depo, TYC, Eagle Eyes)50–100%Highest
TaillampsPC, PMMA, ABSVery high30–60%High
FendersSteelHigh30–50%High
HoodsSteel / aluminiumHigh30–60%Elevated
GrillesABS, PC-ABSHigh20–40%Elevated
MirrorsPP housing, glassModerate30–50%Elevated

AM-to-OEM deltas are directional estimates based on industry reporting, not a controlled pricing study. Validate against internal estimate data.

Key Manufacturers
ManufacturerKey ProductsCAPAChina Ops
Tong Yang GroupBumper covers, fenders, hoods, grilles, IP, radiator supportsParticipantMultiple
Depo Auto PartsHeadlamps, fog lamps, taillamps · US subsidiary MaxzoneParticipant5 facilities
TYC Brother IndustrialReplacement lamps · US distribution via Genera CorpParticipantYes
Eagle EyesAuto lamps · Ships to 100+ countriesParticipantYes
Conjoin Key / Cobra KingSheet metal panels, plastic fasciasParticipantUnknown
Structural difference from OEM risk: OEM assessments track model-specific supply cessation. Aftermarket disruption is a portfolio-wide severity driver — it affects every repair where aftermarket substitution is used, regardless of OEM group or assembly origin. Parts sourcing is operationally external but financially internal to the insurer.
Why This Event Is Different

Taiwan's aftermarket industry has weathered supply disruptions before. This event is structurally different:

1Upstream feedstock, not logistics. The constraint is on naphtha supply to crackers that produce the resins, not freight congestion or port delays.
2Force majeure at Taiwan's sole private cracker. FPCC's reduced rates affect the entire downstream resin supply available to aftermarket manufacturers.
3Claims severity control, not just procurement. When aftermarket parts tighten, the cost flows to insurers through estimate approval, supplements, and OEM substitution.
4Not model-specific. Unlike OEM disruption (Korean, Japanese, German), aftermarket disruption can appear across any make and model where AM substitution is used.
Conditional Transmission Chain
StatusStep
FactHormuz closure reduces naphtha flow to Taiwan. FPCC declares force majeure. Cracker rates fall to 33–43%.
FactReduced ethylene/propylene output. Formosa Plastics Group subsidiaries raising prices, declaring FM on downstream products.
InferenceTaiwanese aftermarket manufacturers face resin cost increases and potential allocation. Manufacturers compete for resin with packaging, electronics, and domestic industries.
InferenceAftermarket bumper covers, lamps, fenders, hoods become more expensive. If allocation bites, lead times extend.
InferenceIf aftermarket parts become unavailable or uneconomic, estimates may require OEM, recycled, or reconditioned substitution — increasing severity.
InferenceSeverity pressure could appear across the collision portfolio where AM substitution is used. Realized impact depends on usage rate, distributor inventory, and part-category mix.
Substitution Ladder — Insurer Cost Impact
StepOptionCost / Cycle Impact
1Aftermarket part availableLowest cost. Standard DRP estimate path.
2Recycled / reconditioned partVariable cost. May be lower than AM for some categories. Availability inconsistent.
3Repair existing damaged partLabour cost replaces parts cost. Not available for all damage types.
4OEM part substitutionHighest parts cost. 30–100%+ premium over aftermarket depending on category.
5Delay — wait for AM availabilityExtends cycle time, rental duration. Supplement stacking risk.
Distributor Inventory Buffer — Timing Model

Taiwan production disruption does not mean immediate Canadian impact. NA distributors hold warehouse inventory that creates a buffer. The size of this buffer determines timing.

ScenarioDistributor InventoryExpected TimingOperational Meaning
Low buffer2–4 weeksImmediate pressure (May–June)Monitor weekly. Escalate if confirmed.
Base case6–10 weeksQ3 pressure (July–August)Validate now. Prepare contingency guidance.
High buffer3+ monthsQ4 or laterWatch replenishment orders. Lower near-term urgency.
Validation needed: The actual distributor inventory buffer for Taiwan-sourced AM collision parts in Canada is unknown. This is the single most important data point for timing the claims impact. Contact LKQ Canada, Keystone, or Certifit for current inventory depth and replenishment status on Taiwan-origin bumper covers and lamps.
Counterarguments
Chinese production shift: Taiwanese manufacturers (Tong Yang, Depo, TYC, Eagle Eyes) have mainland Chinese production facilities. They may maintain NA supply by shifting production to Chinese plants using Chinese resin. However: this may introduce tariff complications (US 25% on Chinese-origin parts), CAPA certification constraints (certification is facility- and part-specific), and capacity/part-number coverage gaps. Partial mitigation, not full offset.
NA aftermarket production: North American aftermarket collision-part production appears limited relative to Taiwan's scale. Domestic recycled, reconditioned, and remanufactured channels may absorb some demand in selected categories (particularly sheet metal and lamps), but are not a full substitute for certified aftermarket at scale.
Falsifier: If FPCC cracking rates recover above 70% for two consecutive months AND Taiwan aftermarket parts pricing/lead times remain stable as reported by NA distributors, the near-term severity risk from this vector should be downgraded.
Non-Plastics Material Exposure
These exposures cut across assembly location. NA-assembled vehicles are not insulated against aluminium, paint, adhesive, or shipping disruption.
Aluminium
Gulf = ~23% of ex-China production · Alba FM · Qatalum full shutdown · EGA attacked
Gulf Share (ex-China)
~23%
~9% global · MINING.COM
Alba (Bahrain)
FM + 19% Cut
Fortune · Bloomberg · Mar 2026
Qatalum (Qatar)
Full Shutdown
6–12 month restart
LME Aluminium Peak
$3,546/t
4-year high

High aluminium-intensity vehicles: F-150 (all-aluminium body), Tesla Model S/X/Y, BMW 5/7 Series, Audi A8, Range Rover, Jaguar F-PACE, Corvette. Industry trend toward aluminium closures increases fleet-wide exposure. This inverts the plastics logic — NA assembly does not insulate.

Paint & Coatings · Solvents
~76% cumulative since 2020 · +6.8–7.6% in 2026 · Thinner availability flagged — June inflection
Cumulative Since 2020
~76%
Repairer Driven News
2026 Increases
6.8–7.6%
PPG, Axalta, BASF, AkzoNobel · Mar–May 2026
Thinner / Solvent Risk
June Inflection
Toyoda Gosei · Apr 28

Refinish paint pricing affects every collision repair regardless of vehicle origin. Direct severity-per-claim driver across the entire claims book.

Paint thinner / solvent availability is a separate and emerging risk. Thinners (toluene, xylene, ethyl acetate) are naphtha-derived aromatics — same disrupted feedstock pathway. Toyoda Gosei warned April 28 that thinner shortages could halt OEM vehicle production as early as June; METI intervened April 13 requesting manufacturers ensure stable thinner supply after distribution bottlenecks appeared in Japan's housing and automotive maintenance sectors. For collision repair, the risk is distinct from parts delays: a thinner shortage constrains shop throughput on every vehicle in-process, not just specific models. Refinish-grade reducers (PPG, Axalta, Sherwin-Williams) share the same toluene/xylene feedstock as OEM production solvents but are distributed through different channels. Monitor refinish supplier allocation language and body shop reports of reducer availability.

Steel · Adhesives · Glass · Rubber · Shipping
Energy-cost pass-through · ~170 containerships / ~450K TEUs affected
MaterialMechanismStatus
SteelEnergy-cost pass-through. European steelmakers face same gas cost surge as chemical producers.Cost Surge
Structural AdhesivesRequired for aluminium panel replacement. Compounds with aluminium disruption.Elevated
GlassEnergy-cost driven. ADAS windshields require model-specific calibration.Watch
Synthetic RubberSame naphtha pathway as plastics. EVs carry ~52% more rubber content.Elevated
Shipping / Logistics~170 containerships / ~450K TEUs affected. Transit time additive to production delays.Elevated
Country Risk Tiers
Countries classified by current petrochemical and material supply status. Classification reflects confirmed conditions from public sources, not projections.

Disrupted

🇰🇷 South KoreaFM CASCADE
🇮🇷 IranEXPORTS HALTED
🇧🇭 BahrainALBA FM
🇶🇦 QatarQATALUM DOWN

Production Cuts

🇯🇵 JapanCRACKER CUTS
🇹🇭 ThailandEXPOSED
🇮🇳 IndiaSTRESSED

Cost Surge

🇩🇪 GermanyPP +30% YTD
🇨🇳 ChinaCOMPETING
🇹🇼 TaiwanKEY RESIN

Structurally Insulated

🇺🇸 United StatesNGL-BASED
🇨🇦 CanadaNGL-BASED
🇲🇽 MexicoINTEGRATED
Country Analysis
Click to expand

Expand any country below for auto-parts exposure detail, broader economic context, and key indicators.

🇰🇷 South Korea
Force majeure cascade · 71% of SMEs received supply-reduction notices

Auto Parts Exposure

All five major petrochemical producers (YNCC, LG Chem, Lotte, Hanwha, GS Caltex) in force majeure or output-cut status. 77% of naphtha imports sourced from Middle East. Government naphtha export ban in effect since March 27 (5 months, through ~Aug 27) — extension to petrochemical products under review. Third-party HMG suppliers (Seoyon E-Hwa, SL Corp, Hwaseung R&A) compete for scarce resin against every other plastics-consuming industry. PE supply prices +200,000 won/ton in March with +400–800k won/ton notified for next month. Russian naphtha waiver (LG Chem 27,000t cargo) expired and was not renewed — constraining that alternative. Anjeon Industries engine valve fire (March 20) compounds HMG production disruption. 26 Korean ships stranded in Hormuz; HMM Namu confirmed struck by unidentified aerial objects May 4 — Seoul considering joining US-led Hormuz mission.

Broader National Impact

Semiconductors: Samsung and SK Hynix (~70% global DRAM, ~80% HBM) face photoresist supply disruption. Japanese suppliers warned both firms. 14 semiconductor supply chain items flagged by industry ministry — including helium (65% from Qatar, facility offline) and bromine (90% from Israel).

Food & packaging: PE/PP packaging prices +20–30%, some raw materials +50% YoY. 13 food industry associations report ~2 weeks of packaging inventory remaining. Government approved temporary sticker labeling for food/cosmetics.

Consumer: Mandatory waste bag shortages and panic buying. PX supply gap threatening polyester fiber, PET bottles, clothing, and automotive interior films.

Financial: KOSPI suffered worst single-day drop in history (–12.06%) on March 4. Market has since recovered to record highs on semiconductor demand. Factory input cost inflation at record high.

Petrochemical Inventory
~2 weeks
SMEs — Supply Reduction
71%
SMEs — Price Increase
92%
May Naphtha Secured
~90%
Mitigating signal
🇯🇵 Japan
~42% naphtha from ME · SPR draw · PM: supply into 2027 · Non-ME imports 3× · Record-low cracker utilization

Auto Parts Exposure

~42% of naphtha imports from Middle East. PM Takaichi stated May 1 that naphtha supply is now expected to last into 2027 via diversified procurement (US, Algeria, Peru — imports tripling in May vs. pre-war) and crude reserve releases. However, cracker utilization hit a record monthly low of 68.6% in March (JPCA), with ethylene output down 38.8% YoY. Government securing supply ≠ uninterrupted production of automotive-grade service-part SKUs. Subaru and Mazda carry highest Canadian exposure (Japan-assembled, no confirmed NA parts fallback). Toyoda Gosei warned material disruptions could begin as early as June, specifically naming paint thinners as a critical production bottleneck. Aisin CEO: "How long we can sustain that is uncertain." Denso FY27 guidance well below consensus. Toyota Boshoku seeking shorter-term supplier commitments.

Broader National Impact

Semiconductors: Japan is a critical supplier of photoresist, specialty gases, and semiconductor-grade chemicals. Naphtha-derived solvents feed into chip fabrication.

Consumer / packaging: Mizkan suspended sales of four natto products (May 4) citing naphtha-driven packaging cost increases; 6–20% price hikes announced. Japan Painting Industry Association raised concerns over paint thinner distribution — METI intervened April 13 requesting manufacturers ensure stable supply.

Shipping: Government working to secure safe passage for Japanese vessels stranded in the Persian Gulf.

Cracker Utilization (Mar)
68.6%
Record low · JPCA
Gov't-Secured Supply
Into 2027
PM Takaichi · May 1 · 3× non-ME imports
Ethylene Output (Mar YoY)
−38.8%
JPCA
🇹🇼 Taiwan
FPCC FM active · ~33% cracker rate · ~80% of global AM collision parts

Auto Parts Exposure — Aftermarket

Taiwan produces ~80% of global aftermarket collision replacement parts and ~90% of aftermarket plastic parts (TAITRA/TABPA — production-base share, not Canadian import share). Key manufacturers (Tong Yang Group, Depo/Maxzone, TYC, Eagle Eyes, Conjoin Key) are CAPA-certified and supply the bumper covers, lamps, fenders, hoods, and grilles that DRP shops use to manage severity.

Formosa Petrochemical — Feedstock Status

FPCC operates Taiwan's only private refinery and naphtha cracker at Mailiao. Force majeure declared on ethylene and propylene (March 10). Refinery utilization fell to ~43% in April; naphtha cracking rate fell to ~33% (FPCC President via Focus Taiwan/CNA, May 5). Feedstock output down ~50% in March. Formosa Chemicals & Fibre declared FM on styrene monomer, phenol, and PTA from April. A Saudi crude supertanker (2M barrels) arrived at Mailiao Port May 6–7 — partial relief. FPCC projects May refinery utilization >60%, June 80%, by sourcing from Red Sea, Gulf of Oman, Mediterranean, and West Africa. CPC Corp activated its No. 4 naphtha cracker (week of Mar 30), boosting national ethylene from 60kt/mo (Apr) → 79kt (May) → 90kt (Jun projected).

Broader National Impact

Consumer: Costco Taiwan imposed purchase limits on plastic packaging products. Formosa Plastics raising prices across most product lines. Polystyrene up to +46%.

Semiconductor: TSMC monitoring but no material impact reported.

FPCC Cracker Rate (Apr)
~33%
FPCC Refinery (Apr)
~43%
PS Price Increase (Apr)
+46%
Force Majeure Status
Active
FPCC, FPC, FCFC
🇨🇳 China
Asymmetric beneficiary · Sinopec 89% ethylene util · PP exports record high · OFAC sanctions on teapots · NDRC fuel-priority directive

Petrochemical Posture

China is the asymmetric beneficiary of the Hormuz crisis. Sinopec Q1 ethylene utilization at 89% (only −1.5% YoY); refinery utilization ~83%. Sinopec targets +26% chemical exports for 2026 (3.65 MMt). Chinese PP exports hit an all-time monthly high in March 2026. PetroChina reports Hormuz accounts for only ~10% of its crude/gas supply. However, NDRC issued an April 17 directive ordering refiners to prioritize fuel over chemicals — capping China's ability to fully redirect output to polymer exports.

Force Majeures & Supply Disruptions

Wanhua Chemical declared FM March 9 on TDI and MDI — polyurethane intermediates critical to auto seating, foam, sealants, and structural adhesives. Wanhua is now global No. 1 MDI producer at 4.5 MTPA with 700kt Fujian expansion announced for Q2. CNOOC-Shell Huizhou JV suspended PE shipments indefinitely from March 5.

Sanctions & Trade Policy

OFAC sanctioned Hengli Petrochemical (Dalian) on April 24 for Iranian crude purchases (~5M+ barrels traced). Wind-down license expires May 24. MOFCOM issued a formal blocking order May 2 against five sanctioned refiners — first formal use of China's 2021 counter-sanctions rules. Teapot refineries continue operating under the blocking order but face elevated risk. China imported ~1.4 mbd Iranian crude in 2025 via shadow fleet.

Auto Parts Exposure

China is a net petrochemical exporter serving as stopgap supplier for Japanese and Korean buyers — this redirects Chinese production away from other export markets, tightening global availability. Several major Taiwanese aftermarket manufacturers (Tong Yang, Depo, Eagle Eyes) have China production facilities. Tesla Shanghai-built Model 3 units entering Canada are the primary direct OEM exposure. Chinese NA-bound auto parts also face Section 232 tariff stacking (15–50% range).

Resource Controls

Sulfuric acid export ban effective May 1 (~3–4.65M tonnes/year removed from global market). Follows phosphate fertilizer export suspension and earlier critical mineral restrictions (tungsten, germanium, gallium). Tungsten hexafluoride (WF6) supply to Korean/global chipmakers tightening under export controls.

Sinopec Ethylene Util (Q1)
89%
Only −1.5% YoY
Chemical Export Target
+26% YoY
Sinopec · 3.65 MMt
Hengli OFAC Wind-Down
May 24
Blocking order active
🇩🇪 Germany / EU
Cost surge, not supply cessation · PP +30% YTD · Paint +76% cumulative since 2020

Auto Parts Exposure

European auto parts exposure is a cost surge, not a supply cessation. European resin producers face elevated natural gas and crude costs. BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Audi, VW, Porsche, MINI parts costs rising. European refinish paint suppliers (PPG, Axalta, BASF, AkzoNobel) have announced 6.8–7.6% increases in 2026.

Broader National Impact

Energy: Compounded energy cost pressure — 2022 Russian gas crisis followed by 2026 Hormuz shock. Steelmakers, glass producers, and chemical companies all under margin pressure.

Aluminium: European smelters already curtailed. Gulf smelter disruption adds further pressure (~23% of ex-China production).

🇺🇸🇨🇦🇲🇽 North America
NGL-based feedstock · Structurally insulated · Export pull is the risk vector

Auto Parts Exposure

NA resin production is NGL-based (natural gas liquids), structurally insulated from naphtha disruption. NA PP spot prices stable. However, export pull is the risk: NA producers running at max capacity and increasing exports to fill global gap. Ford, GM, Stellantis core models insulated for plastics. Stellantis Italian brands (Alfa Romeo, Fiat) are the primary exception.

Broader National Impact

Consumer fuel: US gas prices up ~50% since war began. California average above $6/gallon.

Sulfuric acid: US/Canada protected under USMCA — among least affected economies. Canada is a net producer/exporter via smelters.

Canada-specific: Subaru shifted Canada-market production from Indiana back to Japan due to countertariffs — increasing parts exposure during crisis window.

🇮🇷🇧🇭🇶🇦 Conflict Zone
Iran exports halted · Alba FM · Qatar helium offline · Upstream supply impact

Iran: Halted all petrochemical exports (April 27). 85% of export capacity disrupted. Major global sulfur and petrochemical producer — removal compounds every downstream disruption.

Bahrain: Alba aluminium smelter (~1.6M tonnes/year capacity) — one of the world's largest. Production cuts deepen Gulf aluminium supply gap.

Qatar: Ras Laffan helium facility (>1/3 of global production) offline since Iranian drone strikes March 2. Korea sourced 65% of helium from Qatar in 2025. Critical for semiconductor fabrication — no viable substitute.

CategoryTrigger
KoreanSeoyon E-Hwa or SL Corporation disclose resin procurement difficulty. Mobis Parts Canada issues allocation advisory.
KoreanDealer lamp/mirror ETAs extend before bumper ETAs (confirms third-party bottleneck thesis).
JapaneseKoito or Stanley Electric production cuts at Japan plants. Subaru or Mazda dealer parts allocation notices.
German/EuropeanAutomotive-grade PP or ABS force majeure from European producer. European suppliers begin rationing.
NA / Cross-CuttingNA PP allocation announced. TPE newsletter uses "allocation" or "rationing." Formosa Plastics (Taiwan) FM ✓ ACTIVE
NA / Cross-CuttingBackorder % rises >2σ. Days-to-repair exceeds 30-day rolling baseline by >15%.
AftermarketLKQ/Keystone/Certifit price increase on Taiwan-sourced bumper covers or lamps. DRP shops request OEM-only authorization on categories that previously used aftermarket.
GeopoliticalProject Freedom triggers ceasefire collapse. Iran strikes Fujairah oil hub (confirmed May 4) — bypass route now under threat. Korea naphtha resupply via Yanbu/Fujairah disrupted.
AluminiumAlba production cuts deepen. EGA capacity further reduced. LME sustains above $3,500/t.
Disruption Timeline
Projected progression if Hormuz remains closed. Based on historical buffer periods, confirmed production cut timelines, and observed market behaviour.

Feb 28 – Apr (Weeks 1–8)

Hormuz closed. Price increases flowing through global markets. NA physical supply available from inventory + domestic NGL feedstock. Global polymer prices up ~30–50% by segment.

Now — Mid June (Weeks 9–15) ← Current

Resin manufacturers drawing down ~6 weeks of raw material inventory. Specialty grades tightening first. Export pull from NA accelerating. Korean producers in force majeure. Japanese producers cutting output.

June – July (Weeks 15–20)

Resin allocation expected broadly, especially specialty grades. Tier 1 country supply chains (Korea, Japan) severely impacted. Lead times extending for Tier 2/3 suppliers. NA domestic tightening likely if export pull continues.

Aug – Sept (Weeks 20–28)

Parts backorders materialize at scale in NA. Claims cost impact compounds — rental costs extend, supplements stack, severity-per-claim increases.

Buffer window: The current position (Week 11) is within the inventory drawdown phase. The transition to allocation phase depends on closure duration, mitigating factors (Korea naphtha resupply, Japan diversification), and the pace of NA export pull.
Signal Log
Confirmed public-source signals relevant to auto parts supply chain exposure. Most recent first.
May 11, 2026
Trump rejects Iran counteroffer ("totally unacceptable"); 4th round of Oman talks same day. Netanyahu: war "not over." Brent ~$104, WTI ~$98, both +2%. HMM Namu confirmed struck by unidentified aerial objects; 26 Korean ships stranded in Hormuz. Deep research: Asian plant utilization 83% → 63% → 57% (ICIS May fcst). JPCA: Japan crackers record-low 68.6% (Mar), ethylene −38.8% YoY. Toyoda Gosei pre-baked 200k-vehicle shortfall; paint-thinner June inflection. FPCC projects May >60%, June 80% recovery. Sinopec 89% ethylene util, +26% chemical export target. Chinese PP exports hit all-time high. Wanhua FM on MDI/TDI. OFAC sanctioned Hengli (wind-down May 24); MOFCOM blocking order May 2. ICIS IPEX +32.7% MoM (record). Recovery consensus: "not normal for rest of 2026." C&EN: ~15 MMt ethylene capacity lost annualized.
CNBC / Al Jazeera / Korea Herald / ICIS / JPCA / C&EN / Syntex / Fortune / Hydrocarbon Processing / Focus Taiwan
May 5, 2026
UAE reports second consecutive day of Iranian missile/drone attacks; Hapag-Lloyd confirms transits still impossible. Brent volatile $111–117. US insists ceasefire holds. LYB Q1: 20%+ of global PE/PP capacity impacted; NA PE orders +20% vs pre-war; cumulative PE price increases $0.50/lb; HDPE "super scarce." Plastics Technology: another 10–15¢/lb May increase expected. Goldman warns global oil stocks could fall to 98 days by end-May; naphtha/LPG depleting fastest.
NPR / CNBC / Al Jazeera / Plastics Technology / LYB Q1 / Goldman Sachs
May 4, 2026
U.S. launches "Project Freedom" — CENTCOM deploys destroyers, 100+ aircraft, 15,000 service members to escort stranded vessels. IRGC responds with cruise missiles at US warships and commercial vessels. Iranian drone strikes Fujairah Petroleum Industries Zone (UAE) — fire at oil hub, 3 injured. Fujairah is the key bypass route outside the Strait. Brent closes at $114.44, +6%. Only 2 US-flagged vessels transit. Hapag-Lloyd: "transits not possible for our ships."
CENTCOM / CNBC / Al Jazeera / NPR / Bloomberg
May 1, 2026
S&P Global WPC: 12% of global ethylene production lost. NA producers running at maximum capacity. Port Houston PE exports increasing.
C&EN / S&P Global WPC
Apr 30, 2026
Global PP prices up 30%+ YTD. Europe at 4-year highs. Some segments +40–50% in packaging. Automotive component costs rising.
PolyesterTime / ChemOrbis
Apr 28, 2026
Korea industry ministry: 90% of pre-war naphtha supply secured for May. YNCC up to 65% from 55%. Korea Petrochemical Ind. at 72%. Crude oil swap system under review for extension. Baker Hughes assumes Strait not fully operational until H2 2026.
Korea Times / Korea Herald / CNBC
Apr 27, 2026
Iran halted all petrochemical exports to stabilize domestic market. 85% of export capacity disrupted. Jubail PPE resin facility struck — PCB prices +40%.
Iran International
Apr 17, 2026
Hanwha TotalEnergies declares force majeure on paraxylene (PX). Condensate supply from Middle East cut off.
Seoul Economic Daily
Apr 4, 2026
Yeochun NCC declares force majeure. All facilities at minimum capacity. LG Chem, Lotte Chemical, Hanwha warn of FM.
Korea Times / C&EN / Seoul Economic Daily
Apr 3, 2026
Anjeon Industries engine valve factory fire disrupts Hyundai/Kia production. Anjeon = ~50% of HMG domestic engine valve supply. Partial normalization not expected until June. Models affected: GV80, GV70, Palisade, Avante, G90.
Seoul Economic Daily
Collision Parts Exposure Watch List
49 non-NA assembled vehicle models assessed across 8 collision-relevant part categories. Risk flags reflect assembly location, supplier geography, and known resin constraints. Overlay against policies in force by VIN.
↓ Download Excel — Parts Exposure Watch List (.xlsx)
HIGH Non-NA sourced, supplier under stress
ELEVATED Likely non-NA, cost surge environment
LOWER Commonly NA-sourced
VERIFY Build source uncertain — check VIN
49 models
BrandModelAssemblyTierUS?BumpersLampsMirrorsTrimSealsLinersADASInterior

Key Notes for Overlay

VIN prefix guide: K = Korea, J = Japan, W = Germany, S = UK, T = Hungary/Slovakia, 3 = Mexico, 1/2/4/5 = US

Canada-only Korean models (EV3, EV4, EV5, Niro PHEV, Kona EV, IONIQ 6) have no US parts pipeline fallback.

Risk types differ by OEM group: Korean = supply cessation (force majeure). Japanese = production cuts. German = cost surge.

Subaru Canada-market units shifted from Indiana to Japan due to countertariffs — increasing exposure during crisis.

Bumper covers for Korean models: Mobis molds in-house with priority resin allocation — last category to ration. Lamps ration first.

ADAS sensors/cameras are globally sourced and not protected by NA assembly. Watch across all tiers.

Assembly location is an exposure proxy, not proof of replacement-parts origin. This is an exposure screen, not a procurement recommendation. Verify by dealer ETA and EPC before operational action.

Repair Stall Risk — ADAS / SRS / Harness
Non-stockable, model-specific electronic and safety components that will extend cycle time regardless of body-parts availability. This is a claims triage tool, not a stocking list. Click any row for supplier detail and recommended action.
↓ Download Excel — Repair Stall Risk Tool (.xlsx)
EXPECT DELAY Source country under stress, no NA fallback
PROBABLE DELAY Mixed sourcing or cost surge
MONITOR NA operations exist, watch for extension
LOWER RISK NA-sourced or confirmed
VERIFY Build source determines risk
29 entries
BrandModelAssemblyTierADASCalibrationSRSHarness
Claims Handling Guide — 7 Scenarios
Canada-only Korean model + any ADAS/SRS involvement
What to expect
No US parts pipeline. All components Korea-sourced. Force majeure environment.
Action
Highest-risk scenario. Authorize maximum rental. Early total-loss evaluation.
Rental auth
28+ days. Weekly review. Customer communication plan.
Tier 1 vehicle + front-end hit + ADAS-equipped
What to expect
Body parts delayed. ADAS sensors/cameras also delayed. Calibration parts single-source.
Action
Flag at FNOL. Authorize extended rental up front. Track body and electronics ETAs separately.
Rental auth
21+ days minimum. Review at day 14.
Tier 1 vehicle + SRS deployment (multiple bags)
What to expect
Curtain, side, knee, front airbags all model-specific. Clockspring adjacent. Staggered availability.
Action
Track SRS parts ETAs by brand. Supplement authority pre-approved.
Rental auth
21+ days. Supplement authority pre-approved.
Any EV/PHEV + structural or underbody damage
What to expect
HV harness damage assessment required. Typically non-repairable.
Action
Early HV harness assessment. Route to EV-certified facility.
Rental auth
Dependent on HV assessment. Flag for extended cycle.
Subaru (any model) + EyeSight-equipped + front-end hit
What to expect
EyeSight stereo cameras — proprietary. Calibration model-specific. All Japan-sourced.
Action
Flag at FNOL. EyeSight calibration parts are the binding constraint.
Rental auth
21+ days. EyeSight calibration ETA drives timeline.
Any vehicle + windshield replacement + ADAS
What to expect
Windshield-mounted cameras require recalibration. Targets and brackets model-specific.
Action
Confirm recalibration included in estimate. Verify calibration parts availability.
Rental auth
Standard + 1–2 additional days if parts available.
Tier 3 NA-assembled vehicle + ADAS-equipped
What to expect
Body parts likely available. ADAS modules globally sourced — may still face delays.
Action
Do not assume ADAS parts follow body-parts availability. Track separately.
Rental auth
Standard + extension if ADAS parts delayed.
Supplier Concentration
CategoryTop SuppliersShareNA OperationsRisk
Wire HarnessesYazaki, Sumitomo, Kyungshin, Yura, Leoni, AptivJapanese firms ~60%Yazaki: Mexico. Aptiv: Mexico, US. Kyungshin/Yura: US, Mexico.Hand-assembled, model-specific, not stockable. 8–16 week lead times.
ADAS SensorsBosch, Continental, ZF, Valeo, Mobileye, DensoTop 7 = ~32%Bosch: MI, SC. Continental: MI, TX. Denso: MI, TN, AL.Model-specific. Calibration parts non-interchangeable.
Calibration BracketsOEM-specific, low-volumeOften single-sourceLimited — shipped from assembly countryNon-substitutable. Low safety stock at distributors.
SRS Airbag ModulesAutoliv, ZF, Joyson, Toyoda GoseiAutoliv ~47%, ZF ~20%Autoliv: UT, MI, IN. ZF: MI, SC. Joyson: MI, TN.Model-specific. Curtain, side, knee, front all different PNs.
SRS ClockspringOEM-captive or Tier 1ConcentratedFollows harness supplierOften overlooked. Required for steering-wheel airbag reconnection.
HV Battery HarnessYazaki, Sumitomo, Aptiv, Leoni, KyungshinSame as wire harnessSame as wire harnessSafety-critical. Often non-repairable. Replace = extended cycle.