¿Cómo afectará a los precios del mercado de la silicona la cancelación por China de las desgravaciones fiscales a la exportación?

¿Cómo afectará a los precios del mercado de la silicona la cancelación por China de las desgravaciones fiscales a la exportación?

I see many exporters facing a direct cost shock. I see many buyers facing price confusion[^1]. I know that this mix can turn the silicone market[^2] noisy very fast.

I believe China’s cancellation of the export VAT rebate[^3] for silicones in primary forms will not create one clean price jump. I expect a short-term rush before April 1, a real cost reset[^4] after the policy starts, and then a more selective market where strong suppliers[^5] do better than price-only sellers.

China silicone export tax rebate and silicone price impact

I look at this topic through an SIO angle. I do not stop at the policy headline. I look at order timing, inventory moves, margin pressure, buyer emotion[^6], and supplier strength. That is where I find the real price story. I have seen many markets react before a policy starts, not after. I have also seen markets overreact in the short run and then calm down when real demand shows up. So I want to break this down in a simple way. I want to look at the short-term move, the longer-term price reset, the winners and losers in export trade, and the smart actions that buyers and distributors should take now.

Why Could Silicone Prices Rise Before April 1?

I see many buyers making one common mistake. I see them thinking the market will wait for the policy date. I do not think it will.

I expect a rush of early shipments before April 1 because exporters still want to use the old rebate window. I believe that rush can tighten near-term supply, support benchmark prices such as DMC, and create a short but real wave of price strength.

Short term silicone price rise before export tax rebate cancellation

What I see in the short run

I see the first move as a timing move, not a value move. I mean that many exporters will try to ship earlier, not because final demand suddenly became stronger, but because the shipment date now changes cost. I have seen this kind of front-loading before. I usually see factories push production, traders push booking, and overseas buyers bring orders forward. That process can tighten supply in the local market for a few weeks. It can also make benchmark products look stronger than they really are. I do not read that as a full trend change. I read it as a policy-driven pull-forward.

How I read the risk

I also see a second side to this move. I think the same rush that lifts prices in the short run can weaken prices later if too much demand gets pulled forward. I would not be surprised if April or the second quarter feels softer after the rush ends.

What I watchWhat it means to meLikely short-term effect
Exporters pushing shipment dates forwardOld rebate window still matters before April 1More order concentration in the short run
DMC and 107 rubber price movementUpstream confidence is getting strongerEasier price increase talks
Buyer stock buildingFear of higher landed cost is risingFaster booking, tighter spot supply
Order flow after the rushReal demand starts to showRisk of later slowdown

I think this is why the market can feel hot and fragile at the same time. I see activity rising, but I do not automatically call that healthy end demand. I call it a policy-driven squeeze in time. That is why I tell buyers not to read the pre-April price rise in a simple way. I think they should ask one hard question: “Am I buying because I need the stock, or because I fear the next quote?” That answer matters.

Will Silicone Export Prices Reset After April 1?

I believe a rebate can hide weak pricing discipline[^7]. I believe that once it disappears, real costs come back into full view.

I expect export quotes[^8] for HS 39100000 silicone in primary forms to reset after April 1. I believe suppliers will have only three choices: raise prices, accept lower margins, or shift the sales mix toward better-value products.

Long term silicone export price reset after April 1

Why I think the old quote logic breaks

I see the old rebate as a cushion that made low-price export competition easier to keep. Once that cushion goes away, I think many suppliers will find that their old quote logic no longer works. I do not mean that every seller can pass the full cost increase to the market at once. I mean that the room for careless price cutting gets much smaller. I also think buyers will start to compare suppliers in a different way. I think they will look less at the first offer and more at total reliability, lead time, claims risk, and technical support[^9].

What the cost reset[^4] means to me

I also think the reset is bigger than one line on an invoice. I see it as a return to more honest pricing. When the rebate era fades, raw materials, energy, process control, compliance, and logistics show up more clearly in the quote.

Pricing factorBefore cancellationAfter cancellation
Export tax rebate cushionI see it softening price pressureI see it disappearing
Margin room for low-price sellersI see it as thin but still workableI see it as much tighter
Price competition styleI see more room for aggressive discountingI see more need for rational quoting
Buyer focusI see some buyers chasing headline priceI see more buyers asking about supply safety[^10]

At Topsil Silicone, I do not see this as bad news only. I also see a cleaning effect. I think the market becomes harder, but I also think it becomes fairer. I believe quality stability, formula know-how, and delivery strength matter more when the easy rebate support is gone. I like that direction, because I want silicone prices to reflect real product value, not only short-term policy support.

Who Will Win and Lose in Silicone Export Trade?

I do not think every exporter will feel this policy in the same way. I think cost structure will matter more than sales talk.

I expect integrated producers and value-added suppliers to adapt faster. I expect small exporters that rely on thin margins and rebate-supported quotes to feel the strongest pressure.

Who wins and loses after silicone export tax rebate cancellation

Why I expect the gap to widen

I see this policy as a market filter[^11]. I think it will separate suppliers with real strength from suppliers that live on narrow spreads. If a company has strong upstream cost control, a stable customer base, and a product mix that is not easy to replace, I think that company still has room to move. If a company mainly wins by being a little cheaper every week, I think that company now faces a much harder game. I also think the gap will widen between commodity-style export sellers and suppliers that offer custom grades, stronger consistency, local stock, or better technical support[^9].

How I read the global side

I also see a global trade angle here. Some overseas buyers will push back on higher prices, especially price-sensitive buyers in markets that focus on low cost first. At the same time, I think serious buyers will still prefer China if China can offer stable quality, large-scale supply, and fast response.

Supplier typeWhat I think happensWhy it matters
Integrated large producerI expect better resilienceCost control is stronger
Mid-sized technical supplierI expect mixed but manageable pressureValue-added products can protect margin
Small price-led exporterI expect the hardest squeezeOld low-price model gets weaker
Distributor with strong serviceI expect better customer stickinessLocal stock and service reduce buyer risk

I think this is where the market gets more interesting. I do not believe the policy simply makes all Chinese silicone less competitive. I think it forces the market to ask a better question: “Who is actually good?” I welcome that question. At Topsil, I want to compete on quality consistency, custom solutions[^12], technical support[^9], and supply speed from our warehouse network. I do not want to build business only on the cheapest line in the inbox.

What Should Buyers and Distributors Do Right Now?

I think waiting for the market to “settle” can cost more than making a clear plan early. I think confusion is expensive.

I would not treat this as a one-time price event. I would review HS code scope, shipment timing, stock level, supplier strength, and product fit now, before April turns uncertainty into delay.

What buyers and distributors should do before silicone tax rebate cancellation

What I would do as a buyer

I would first check whether the product I buy is exposed directly to the rebate cancellation. I would not assume every silicone item is affected in the same way. Then I would review my next 60 to 90 days of demand. I would ask whether I need safety stock, or whether I can manage with staged deliveries. I would also compare suppliers in a harder way. I would not ask only for today’s best price. I would ask who can still hold quality, lead time, and service when the market gets tense. I think that question protects margin better than chasing one cheap lot.

What I would do as a distributor or brand owner

I would also prepare my customers for a more rational market. I would explain why price may move, what part is policy, what part is raw material, and what part is supply chain timing[^13]. That kind of communication builds trust.

AcciónWhy I would take itWhat it protects
Confirm product classification earlyI want no customs or pricing surprisesShipment planning
Review 60–90 day demandI want to avoid panic buying or stock gapsWorking capital
Ask suppliers about real stock and lead timeI want facts, not only offersDelivery reliability
Compare technical support[^9] and consistencyI want fewer production losses[^14] laterTotal cost
Build one backup supplierI want flexibility if the market turns fastSupply continuity

At Topsil Silicone, I would use this moment to help buyers make smarter choices, not just faster purchases. I would share market insight. I would explain price logic. I would help customers choose the right RTV-2 silicone grade for mold making, life casting, pad printing, vacuum casting, electronic potting, and other real uses. I would do that because I want to be more than a material seller. I want to be a growth partner[^15] when the market gets harder. I think that is when a real supplier proves value.

I see this policy as a short-term price trigger and a long-term market filter[^11]. I believe the rebate era fades, and real product value, stable supply, and technical strength matter more.


[^1]: Learn about the factors contributing to price confusion to better manage your purchasing strategy. [^2]: Explore insights on market dynamics to make informed decisions in the silicone industry. [^3]: Understanding the implications of the export VAT rebate can help you navigate price changes effectively. [^4]: Discover how cost resets can affect pricing strategies and market stability. [^5]: Identifying strong suppliers can help you ensure quality and reliability in your purchases. [^6]: Explore the psychological factors that can impact purchasing decisions in the silicone market. [^7]: Learn about the importance of pricing discipline for maintaining market stability and competitiveness. [^8]: Explore the elements that affect export quotes to make more informed purchasing decisions. [^9]: Explore the role of technical support in choosing reliable suppliers for your silicone needs. [^10]: Learn strategies to ensure supply safety and mitigate risks in your purchasing process. [^11]: Understanding market filters can help you identify strong suppliers and navigate market changes. [^12]: Discover how custom solutions can enhance your product offerings and supplier relationships. [^13]: Understanding supply chain timing can help you anticipate price fluctuations and secure better deals. [^14]: Identifying causes of production losses can help you mitigate risks and improve efficiency. [^15]: Explore the benefits of having suppliers that support your growth and success in the market.

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Brian

Hola, este es el cerebro, que es un padre de dos hijos. En el día soy el CEO de Topsilsilicone. que tiene 20 años de experiencia en rtv-2 silicona presentada; en la noche soy un niño grande travieso y amable para mis dos tipos.

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