Clarity on Commodities Trading
Global survey
key findings
The trading environment
• 70 percent of respondents found low
commodity prices to have a negative impact
on their businesses.
• 51 percent of respondents expect commodity
prices to stay at current low levels for a further
one to two years with energy prices expected
to increase first.
• Both low commodity prices (21 percent of
responses) and the slowdown of economic
growth globally (18 percent) are expected
to be the biggest challenges to trading
businesses over the next one to two years.
• 88 percent are experiencing "some" or "strong"
pressure on trading margins. Almost one-quarter
is revising their strategies as a result, and
22 percent are discontinuing certain business
activities.
Financing and investments
• Restricted access to funding is affecting
one-third of respondents through increased
financing costs.
• 30 percent have diversified sources of
financing in order to maintain sufficient
access to capital.
• 25 percent see most potential to invest in
upstream assets, 30 percent in midstream
assets and 39 percent in downstream assets.
• North America is the region with the greatest
growth potential, at one-fifth of responses.
• Most respondents said ROI on investments
in the past one to two years had met or
exceeded expectations. This was led by
energy (72 percent) and metals (73 percent)
traders. By contrast, agricultural traders
generally experienced returns over the same
period that were either negative or did not
meet expectations.
Regulation
• 27 percent see greater regulation as the most
disruptive factor in commodities trading in the
longer term. This compares to 16 percent citing
government interference in the free market and
15 percent saying it is the impact of policy
changes on demand.
• One-third of respondents expect regulation to
have a "medium" impact on existing operations.
One-third meanwhile thought the impact is not
yet clear.
• One in five state that complexity of regulations
is the main challenge in compliance. This is
followed by the increased costs of compliance.
• Expectations of what will drive the higher cost
of compliance were evenly split between further
use of external advisors, hiring legal and/or
compliance personnel, allocating existing staff
to compliance topics and additional investments
in information systems.
• MiFID II leads the perceived compliance burden.
Sustainability
• More than one-quarter of respondents expect
carbon emissions to impact their business
most over the next one to two years; 24 percent
meanwhile expect energy consumption to
have the biggest effect.
• 43 percent anticipate global warming
to negatively or strongly negatively affect
commodities trading in the long term.
39 percent expect barely any impact.
• Global warming’s impact is most felt through
severe weather (38 percent), stranded assets
(27 percent) and resources not being available
(20 percent).
• 17 percent of respondents said their organization
has a board commitment to sustainability
and 12 percent stating that their firm includes
sustainability in its KPIs.