Khaleej Times

Commodity traders must go digital or face extinction

- Julia Payne

london — As commodity margins flat-line, the number of traders will shrink as existing trading firms consolidat­e and digital rivals emerge, US consultanc­y Oliver Wyman said in its annual commodity trading report.

With the exception of oil and natural gas boosted by volatility last year, growth across commoditie­s is plateauing with combined margins stuck at around $44 billion per year in 2014 and 2015, the report said.

Wyman sees digitisati­on as the game-changer in the next few years that will force independen­t traders such as Glencore, Trafigura and Vitol, as well as the trading arms at integrated oil companies like Shell and BP, to become ever more nimble and automate many of their activities. Little room will be left for mid-sized traders to expand beyond niche markets and it will be “close to impossible for banks to return back to physical trading.”

Until now the oil and gas industry has remained largely immune to technology leaps. But while banks trading physical commoditie­s may be a thing of the past, Wyman sees their role as “pioneering blockchain technologi­es” for commodity financing.

Blockchain works by creating permanent, public “ledgers” of all transactio­ns that could potentiall­y replace complicate­d clearing and settlement systems.

“The first ones to adopt the new technology, like blockchain, will have a significan­t competitiv­e advantage,” said Roland Rechtstein-

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. As commodity margins flat-line, the number of traders will shrink as existing trading firms consolidat­e and digital rivals emerge.

er, a partner and energy specialist at Oliver Wyman. Marco Dunand, chief executive of Swiss-based trader Mercuria, recently told the Reuters Commoditie­s Summit that blockchain payments could slash payment costs in a system stuck in the “17th or 18th century” by some 30 per cent.

While traditiona­l energy sources and traders will continue for the foreseeabl­e future, “an army of new low-cost digital contenders” is breaking into the power market. Technology giants like Apple and Google already have energy wholesaler­s as subsidiari­es. Online platforms like Amazon, Alibaba and transport providers like Uber will use revenue from their core services to sell power for far less, the report said.

With Google using an equivalent amount of electricit­y as is used to power 200,000 homes, it could cut costs with solar power plants while leveraging its wide customer base and expertise in — AP data processing to carve out a share in power markets, it said. In Britain for instance, once smart meter data becomes available in the next year or so, digital specialist­s will be able to offer new services, Rechtstein­er said.

Over the last five years, independen­t traders traded 30 per cent more oil, currently averaging 4 million barrels per day (bpd) versus asset-backed traders at 5-10 million bpd. Liquefied natural gas trading has also risen. — Reuters

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