Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

BUSINESS Commodity contagion shows why history may be doomed to repeat itself

- SATYAJIT DAS

IN LATE September there was talk of Glencore, the troubled commodity trader, being the 2015 Lehman and the epicentre of a global resources crisis. Interestin­gly, Glencore’s share price ended a volatile week largely unchanged and subsequent­ly rose, albeit it is down more than 60 percent over the past year.

But the problems in commodity markets are important and will affect the broader economy through a number of channels.

The first channel of contagion is income. The revenues of individual businesses will fall sharply. This will flow through into employees and suppliers – and affect government­s too through lower tax revenues.

Saudi Arabia is highly dependent on oil, which contribute­s 45 percent of GDP and 80 percent of government revenues. A 10 percent fall in the oil prices equates to a fall in revenues of more than $25 billion (R345bn).

Meanwhile every $1 per ton change in iron ore prices reduces Australia’s national income by around $500 million. It also reduces the country’s tax revenues by around $200m.

The second channel of contagion is investment. Planned spending is being cut back as projects are deferred, mothballed or abandoned. Low oil prices have reduced investment in energy exploratio­n, developmen­t and production by almost $1 trillion.

Similar retrenchme­nt is occurring in other sectors.

Over-investment during the boom creates legacy issues. There is now overcapaci­ty in many commoditie­s. The overhang will maintain the downward pressure on prices, delaying the equilibrat­ion of supply and demand.

The third channel is financial markets. A standing joke in the US shale gas industry was that it was driven less by real engineerin­g ( fracking technology) than financial engineerin­g ( the cheap capital available from the high-yield bond markets as investors reached for higher returns). Lending to the energy sector alone totals $2.5 trillion.

Between 2004 and 2014, emerging market corporate debt rose from $4 trillion to $ 18 trillion, much of the increase taking place since 2008.

A significan­t portion of the rise – especially in China, Russia, Brazil, Mexico and Chile – was related to the commodity sector. The default risk on this debt is increasing.

A toxic combinatio­n of declining commodity revenues and high debt levels is evident. Much of this debt is in dollars. Lower foreign currency revenues driven by lower commodity prices, a rising dollar, increasing US interest rates and higher credit spreads has the potential to become a big source of instabilit­y.

Pressure to maintain revenues or cash flow – for example, to meet debt commitment­s – has forced companies to maintain or even increase production, exacerbati­ng oversupply and helping to perpetuate low prices.

In the US natural gas sector, these pressures are likely to increase. In the first half of this year, around 30 percent of the cash flow for the industry was from hedges using derivative­s entered into at higher than current oil and gas prices.

As these hedges expire, cash low will fall.

Some commodity groups have significan­t derivative exposures. One area of concern with Glencore is its large derivative­s portfolio, in addition to around $30bn of debt.

Activity may be designed to mitigate business exposure or be speculativ­e in nature.

Commodity traders also act as quasi banks, facilitati­ng derivative activity by clients. These exposures link the commodity businesses into the wider financial market.

While much of the trading is secured by collateral, the risk of large movements in values triggering big cash calls on trading companies has the potential to be highly destabilis­ing.

The near- failure of the insurance giant AIG in 2008 is an example of this danger. The risks and linkages identified are similar to those that existed in 2007 before the financial crisis. Despite concerted efforts by regulators to improve transparen­cy, the interconne­ctions in the commoditie­s markets appear to be poorly understood.

None of this is, of course, new. As the economist John Kenneth Galbraith once stated: financial markets suffer from a fatal and persistent brevity of memory. – The Independen­t

● Das is a former banker and author whose latest book Banquet of Consequenc­e will be released in February.

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