Shin-Etsu Chemical Co reported a significant U.S. expansion plan that pushed its Tokyo-listed shares higher on Thursday. According to a report cited by Japanese media, the company intends to invest roughly $3.4 billion to increase output of raw materials essential to polyvinyl chloride - PVC - resin production.
The planned investment will be executed by the firm nd via its U.S. subsidiary Shintech at an industrial complex in Louisiana. The project calls for construction of a new ethylene production plant and an electrolysis unit that would produce chlorine - two core inputs for PVC manufacturing. Company planning documents, as described in the report, target completion of these facilities by the end of 2030.
Market reaction to the report was immediate. Shares of Shin-Etsu on the Tokyo exchange climbed as much as 8.3% to reach 6,426 yen, reflecting investor response to the announced push into upstream PVC materials capacity.
In addition to the upstream feedstock expansion, the company is said to be weighing an increase in production of finished PVC products, anticipating higher demand for the material as market conditions change. The investment is framed as a move to position capacity for an expected recovery in the PVC market as excess supply from China begins to ease, according to the report.
The scope and location of the project - an integrated ethylene and chlorine capability at a Louisiana site through Shintech - highlight a sizeable capital commitment to North American manufacturing infrastructure. The timeline to complete the new facilities by the end of 2030 sets a multi-year horizon for the company nd for markets that track PVC feedstock availability.
While the report outlines the planned capital outlay and site-specific facilities, it does not provide further operational or financing details. Likewise, projections about market recovery are presented as anticipatory rationale in the report rather than as quantified forecasts from the company.
Summary: Shin-Etsu plans a roughly $3.4 billion investment via U.S. unit Shintech to build an ethylene plant and chlorine electrolysis unit in Louisiana aimed at boosting PVC feedstock production, with completion targeted by end-2030. Tokyo shares rose up to 8.3% to 6,426 yen on the announcement.