Trade & Forfaiting Review magazine archive
Volume 7 Issue 5
Editor’s foreword
Perhaps more than any other region in the world, the
For those comfortable with the risk level, there are some interesting new markets opening – or re-opening, as it were. Two are coming in from the cold after years of sanctions or pariah status. Many trade financiers are watching
There are two trains of thought on
Courtney Fingar is editor of Trade & Forfaiting Review.
Features
Hedge funds to the rescue
Commodity producers credit limits are feeling the strain of high prices and high freight rates. Small and medium-sized businesses in developing countries are finding it particularly tough to get capital, and banks alone cannot meet the demand. Enter CommodityFinance.com, which is trying to provide some of the missing credit by targeting physical inventories that cannot be sold on a futures exchange. Erika Morphy reports.
Commodity derivatives: In an asset class of their own
Helter smelter
Its high times for metals producers at the moment, with prices soaring, the capital markets mad for mining equities and tenors starting to look like those of oil deals. Meanwhile, junior companies doing exploration in Africa, China and Russia, among other places, are keeping financiers busy. Erika Morphy reports on the latest global developments in oil, metals and mining finance.
Unchartered territory
Factoring is catching on in the Middle East, albeit slower than in other regions, and forfaiting looks to have a better year than last, with some tantalising new markets coming back into the international fold. Should Iran and Turkey disappoint, forfaiters might look to newcomers like Iraq, Libya and Sudan to make up the slack. Courtney Fingar reports.
Opportunity amid challenges
Iraq, one of the worlds most interesting new trade-finance markets, offers untold opportunities and challenges for cross-border trade, and an effective structure for doing business in the country is rapidly being developed. Bruce Proctor, senior vice president and global trade-services head at JPMorgan, discusses the Trade Bank of Iraqs role and explains how companies can take advantage of its services.
Offering a helping hand
A combination of natural disasters and macroeconomic volatility in Turkey during the period from 1999 to 2002 created an unfavourable and uncertain environment for exporting companies. The World Bank stepped in to offer an export financial-intermediation loan in 1999, and having had some success with the programme, is following it up with a new and improved version. Gordon Feller reports.
Continental shift
A recent invoice-finance revolution in European civil-code jurisdictions, led by a new breed of securitisation technologies, has opened up a promising market for financing medium-sized corporates through factoring and invoice discounting. Phillip Kerle, CEO of invoice-finance specialist JMH Demica, predicts that in two or three years this market will even rival that of the UK.
Changing with the times
As corporate preferences shift from the use of documentary credits or LCs to simpler settlement mechanisms, the primacy of banks in facilitating trade fulfillment is declining. The response from banks has been varied. Dhulipala Ramesh and Jayakumar Venkatraman, both senior domain consultants with Infosys Technologies in Bangalore, discuss some of the drivers of this changing environment and suggest how banks can adapt their trade-services businesses using a Prism approach.
Regulars
Market view: Paul Emery
A recent decision by the English Court of Appeal, upholding the original decision of the High Court, has clarified the position when choosing English law as the governing law in Islamic financing transactions.
Company profile: Arabian sights
While many other banks tend to shy away from Middle Eastern risk at the first sign of geopolitical trouble, ABC International Bank keeps its sights firmly on the Arab world. Jeff Fallon, Charlotte Wärmé Wiltshire and Philip Patterson sat down with Courtney Fingar to explain the banks unshakable commitment to the region.
Personal profile: The Russian connection
Driven by challenge and spurred by a seemingly insatiable desire to travel, Marcus Hopkins speaks to Kathleen Williams about his career in commercial banking, his experience with acquisitions and investments in emerging markets, and the future of Moscow Narodny Bank as well as the Russian market.
Country-risk appetite
The analysis from Standard Bank London:
denotes premium content | Jan 10 2009 









