Sector - Soft Commodities
ITFC signs sugar refinery deal
The International Islamic Trade Finance Corporation has signed a US$60mn syndicated structured finance deal with Indonesian sugar refinery, PT Angels Products.
Rich pickings in Brazil
Brazil is primed to become a global agricultural superpower as trade flows to china and other Asian countries increase. Trade banks are eager to capitilise on this trend, writes Rebecca Spong.
Milkiland seals US$100mn syndicated loan
Russian and Ukrainian dairy producer Milkiland has closed a four-year US$100mn syndicated facility with three international banks to refinance its existing loans.
Acron and Sberbank sign loan agreements
Russia’s Sberbank has provided a US$100mn loan to fertiliser firm Acron to fund its trade finance operations.
Ukrainian SME gets international support
Ukrainian Confectionery company ZhL has won a five-year buyer’s credit export finance deal from Rabobank.
ABN Amro sets sights on Asia
ABN Amro has confirmed it will expand the Asian operations of its global energy, commodities and transportation private banking and clearing businesses.
UPDATE: Banks to sign Cocobod PXF
The Ghana Cocoa Board has confirmed that its latest commodity pre-export financing will be signed before the end of the year.
Cocobod starts PXF ball rolling
Cocobod has mandated Barclays, BTMU, SMBC and Standard Bank to lead a US$200mn three-year pre-export financing.
Viewpoint December 01, 2011
GTR editor Rebecca Spong asks who will step in to finance the growing demand for commodity finance.
Commodity finance attracts new players
As European banks struggle with a lack of US dollar liquidity, who will step in to finance the growing demand for commodity finance?
What is key to successful commodity financing is having good and reasonably priced access to US dollars.
And unfortunately for the majority of European banks, this is the one thing they are distinctly lacking.
At a recent Exporta conference, one of the speakers remarked that many continental European banks now prefer to lend in euros, only lending in US dollars to core relationship clients.
But in an industry fuelled by US dollars, this lack of liquidity is likely to cause problems among commodity traders, particularly the smaller companies.
As refinancings begin to hit the market in the coming months, commodity trading houses will be anxiously looking around to see who can fill the void left by the European banks which had previously dominated this market.
Yet it is seems that there are quite a few players waiting in the wings to support the flows of commodities.
Capitalising on their steady source of US dollars, US banks are looking to move into the commodity finance market.
Banks such as Citi, JP Morgan and Bank of America Merrill Lynch are all said to be considering increasing their presence in this market, with some banks’ plans for the roll-out of new commodity finance teams more developed than others.
Regional banks are also keen to take advantage of the absence of the European players.
Just this week GTR received a press release from Ecobank’s commodity finance team promoting a client event they held in Geneva. The event was apparently held with the intention of advising its clients, “How they could take advantage of the vacuum created by the withdrawal of European banks from US dollar-denominated funding of commodities imports and exports in and out of Africa.”
Chinese banks are also moving in. In Brazil, bankers report that Chinese banks are directly financing flows of soy beans and other soft commodities and are working with a Brazilian or Latin American banking counterpart, cutting out any involvement of a European bank.
Any bank involvement in the financing of commodities could potentially be usurped by the growing power of the larger trading houses themselves.
For instance, Trafigura, one of the world’s largest commodity traders, is looking to double the size of its fund management division over the next few years.
Galena, Trafigura’s fund management subsidiary, is reportedly looking to raise an additional US$300mn before the end of the year specifically for its commodity trade finance fund.
But the European banks will not wholly retreat from this market without a fight.
In a banking and insurance CEO conference held in October, a Société Générale presentation stated that its natural resources (under which commodity finance falls), infrastructure and export finance departments remain “sound core franchises” of the bank.
It added that these divisions have “leading positions with capacity to adapt efficiently to structural changes such as dollar scarcity".
So perhaps it is too early to call time on the European banks’ presence in the commodity finance markets?
Yet it cannot be denied that for institutions armed with enough liquidity and a talented, experienced team, the current environment offers a huge opportunity to carve out a significant market share while the European banks are busy solving other problems.
Is it the end of European dominance of the commodity finance market?
Will the new players be committed to this market? Or retreat if the going gets tough again?
Russian wood plant gets EBRD backing
Russian wood manufacturer Kronospan has won a €120mn syndicated loan from development and local banks to build a wood producing plant in Egorievsk, near Moscow.
Africa launches first commodities exchange
India-based Financial Technologies has established Bourse Africa, a pan-African commodities exchange.
Rising out of the ashes: Greece
Greek tobacco continues to attract international bank financing, despite the negative headlines surrounding the deteriorating Greek economy, writes Rebecca Spong.
UPDATE: Cocobod signs record PXF
The annual Ghana cocoa board pre-export facility has been closed at a record US$2bn.
Ecom refinances debt
Swiss agri-firm Ecom has brought in a multicurrency debt facility worth US$350mn less than three months after the firm closed an oversubscribed syndicated loan in Singapore.
The new loan has ABN Amro and Crédit Agricole onboard as bookrunners and mandated lead arrangers.
The funds will be used to refinance...
CBC launches SME programme
US boutique financer Capital Business Credit will lend up to $500mn to small and medium-sized US businesses under its new manufacturing programme.










