the rise of trading houses in the commodities sector [email protected]

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THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail .com

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Page 1: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

THE R

ISE O

F TR

ADING

HOUSES IN T

HE

COMMODITIE

S SECTO

R

[email protected]

Page 2: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

REORDERING OF GLOBAL COMMODITIES MARKETS• Implementation of Dodd Frank/Volcker Rule/EMIR

• Basel III capital rules punitive to commodities

• Loss of important bank counterparties impacts liquidity in futures and physical markets

• Huge turnover in senior staff from Banks to Trade Houses

• Reduction in risk capital for client risk management facilitation

• Bank credibility challenged by scandals in Fx, Libor and Gold Fixing

• Transition from OTC markets to futures and cleared product

• Regulators reign in HFT in futures markets

• Private Equity and Sovereign Wealth Funds increase interest in the sector

• Trade Houses increasingly push integrated model

Page 3: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

BANKS EXIT OR REDUCE THEIR EXPOSURE TO COMMODITIESBanks exit businesses because they are unprofitable

Regulatory bias against commodities (especially physical)

Key risks that banks face in the sector include: Regulatory risk Fines Headline risk

Cost of capital is higher than in traditional lines of business

Market risk Credit risk Operational risk

Regulators exert a preference for the future/cleared model which competes with important OTC business for banks

Page 4: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

BANK GLOBAL/SECTOR COMMODITIES REVENUE POOL

2009 2010 2011 2012 20130

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

0 0

1.5 1.1 0.60 0

1.9

1.3

1

0 0

0.9

0.8

0.5

0 0

2.5

2.4

2.2

0 0

3.4

2.2

1.8

14.3

8.4

10.3

7.7

6.1

Power & Gas Investor Products Others Metals Oil NA

*Data provided by Coalition

Page 5: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

GLOBAL/REGIONAL COMMODITIES REVENUE POOL

2009 2010 2011 2012 20130

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

1 0.91.9 1.4 1.2

5.6

3.9

5.3

4.1

3.2

7.7

3.6

3.1

2.2

1.6

Americas EMEA APAC*Data provided by Coalition

14.3

8.4

10.3

7.7

6.1

Page 6: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

NEW TRENDS IN BANK STRATEGIES

Partial Exits - Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Credit Suisse

Exits - Barclays & Deutsche Bank

Growth - BNP Paribas, CITI, Macquarie, BTG, HSBC

Regional Growth - Standard Bank, Standard Charter, Wells Fargo,

CIBC, RBC, Scotia Bank, Sberbank, ABN AMRO, CBA

Page 7: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

TRADING HOUSES FILL THE VOID

Energy Glencore Trafigura Gunvor Mercuria Vitol Cargill Noble

Agriculture Archer Daniels

Midland Bunge Cargill Louis Dreyfus Glencore Mercuria Noble Wilmar Olam

Metals Glencore Trafigura Noble

Page 8: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

TRADING HOUSES FILL THE VOID

Advantages

Fast decision making

Willingness to use balance sheet

Private ownership (most)

Opaque structure

Risk taking capabilities

Light touch regulation

Continue to invest in developing markets

Investing in the integrated model

No compensation restrictions

Disadvantages

Opaque Structure

Higher cost of capital

Limited regulatory oversight

Succession planning issues

Anticipatory new regulation

Exposure to global economic downturns

Limited provider of risk management

services

Page 9: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

MARKET IMPACTS OF THE NEW TRENDGlobal dominance of trades houses adversely impacts the

relationship of price

makers to price takers

Reduction of liquidity in forward markets and physical markets

Increased cost of risk management to consumers and producers

Increased cost of balance sheet usage

Light regulatory regimes may allow trade houses a wide path to exercise market power

Ownership/control of strategic infrastructure causes increased prices volatility

Lack of market transparency in data

Pressure to use standardized exchange products increases basis risk for hedgers

Regulators create new TBTF institutions in the clearing houses

Banks reduced presence in physical market makes certain project finance deals undoable, has a direct impact on storage costs, security of supply (SPR) and increases end user costs

Page 10: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

TRADE HOUSES TAKE CENTER STAGE

Oligopolistic pricing in physical market

Control over important infrastructure chokepoints

Hearsay reporting of prices to important industry pricing publication

Domination of physical commodity production and supply in developing markets

Controlling large market share in certain commodities

Trade Houses enter the Hedge Fund space

Page 11: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

CHINA PARTICIPATES IN OPENING MARKETSChinese financial institutions become active in global commodity markets

• ICBC/Standard Bank, China Merchants Securities, GF Securities, BOCI

Chinese exchanges focus on global markets

• HKS – LME, SHFE – INA

China SOE’s buys stakes in global trading companies

• COFCO Noble (agriculture), COFCO Nidera (Agriculture)

Private Equity buys stakes in commodity traders and supply chains

• CIC- Noble, HOPU various

China (Shanghai) Free Trade Zone develops to grow international trading

• Global Companies register to use FTZ, SHFE locates INE in FTZ

Page 12: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

GAME SET MATCH?

New Banks enter the market and fill the void in financial and physical products

• First quarter commodities earnings by banks indicate a recovery ?

• New banks (along with certain incumbents) seize a growth opportunity

Trade house saturate markets with new hires and growing capital commitments

• Low volatility in major commodity markets spoil the party

• Commodity earnings stagnate causing retrenchment

Financial regulators relent, allow banks to have a presence in physical commodities and reduce the most onerous portions of regulation

• Loss of transparency, liquidity and competition impacts final rule making

Trade houses come under increase regulatory scrutiny

• Pressure from the global community forces Trade Houses to conform to bank like regulation and transparency

• Run up in commodity prices causes regulators to cast a wider net

Page 13: THE RISE OF TRADING HOUSES IN THE COMMODITIES SECTOR neal.shear@gmail.com

THE STRUGGLE BETWEEN PRICE MAKERS AND PRICE TAKERS WILL CONTINUE, HOWEVER MARKET FORCES WILL BRING THEM INTO BALANCE

1. “I have a suggestion for you. Raise your goddam fares twenty percent. I’ll raise mine the next mourning”. Crandall CEO American Airlines/Putnam CEO Braniff Airlines

2. “Our business is moving molecules from point A to point B and managing the credit, market and operational risk associated with that. When there is more volatility people pay us more to do that”. Yusef Alireza CEO Noble

3. “A billion dollars isn’t what it used to be”. Nelson Bunker Hunt Investor