Monthly Archives: June 2014

Hypothecation

Written by Paul Adkins

Anne Stevenson-Yang is a highly respected commentator on the Chinese economy. In her most recent publication, she examines the Qing Dao commodity trading scandal in context of China’s shadow banking and credit industries.

Several of you have asked us about the Qing Dao scandal, so I am posting Anne’s report here, with her permission.

Hypothecation

By Anne Stevenson-Yang
June 30, 2014

The irregularities around copper and aluminum financing in Qingdao started small and local. But the incident soon transformed into yet another story of China’s fraught banking sector, another story of credit creation based on assets that were simply not there.

At first, what seemed to be an investigation into an issue involving an insignificant amount of copper opened the door to a systemic problem of widespread, multiple and fraudulent hypothecation of commodity inventories. Discovering that the same inventory had been used repeatedly to collateralize large borrowings, international banks quickly began to withdraw from providing letters of credit to finance China’s commodities trade, and Chinese banks quickly moved to call loans secured by collateralized commodities.

The extent of the problem is now recognized to run into the billions: a widely quoted report by Goldman analysts estimates that about USD 160 bln in short-term foreign-currency loans outstanding are backed by commodities. The market value of the underlying commodities may never be fully known, but it is certain that a lot of the cash lent against them is now out of reach.

Any “naked” debt that defaults will be absorbed into various institutions managed by the central government. But constraining the use of imported commodities for borrowing would be of greater and more lasting impact to the international economy than the debt itself. If China’s importation of commodities were untethered from financial manipulations and tied more closely to China’s real economic demand for them, it would truly mean the end of the great commodities inflation cycle driven by Chinese global procurement.

Where the TSF went

As far as financing is concerned, no one should mistake this month’s focus on commodities hypothecation to be a government crackdown on the shadow market. Of necessity, the wide-ranging alternative financial system will remain a key platform for the Chinese economy to continue headline growth. Instead, the commodity scandal indicates the unique speed and flexibility of the Chinese system, both the core formal system and its shadowy extensions, in finding new financing and wealth extraction mechanisms when old ones become compromised or constrained.

What has looked this year like a return to slow credit growth under guidance by a conservative central bank actually turns out to be an externalizing of the credit bubble. It began with aggressive bond issuance in overseas markets, and now it turns out that hard-currency trade financing has patched in where domestic Renminbi loans were constrained. How much of this credit growth ultimately lurks on the balance sheets of foreign banks is hard to tell; they are exposed via open letters of credit, via commodity-backed cross-border and onshore loans, and via claims on partner banks in China. Whether or not their exposure is extensive, the Qingdao incident exposes the fact that the commodities trade is a fundamental strut in the hot-money infrastructure. Trade partners will not be able to escape being caught when the shadow system crumbles.

Not as good as gold

The Chinese economy specializes in investing: some might say that is the only economic activity at which the government is successful. Given government’s laser focus on collecting and deploying capital, China has developed stunning excess capacity in just about everything; the ghost cities ranged across every part of the land are the latest instantiation of that tendency. Commodities are another: the Chinese press estimates that 30 mln tons of iron ore sit in warehouses collateralizing debt before being deployed in steelmaking. As much as 70% of copper stores are being used as collateral, according to copper traders. Estimates put the amount of soybeans held as collateral at about 10 mln tons, against 63 mln tons of imports in 2013; the 33% spike in soybean imports in Q1 this year was almost certainly done in reaction to tightening of domestic credit. Further reports have exposed extensive and likely multiple hypothecation of palm oil, aluminum, zinc, nickel, titanium, and just about every other traded commodity.

Importing commodities has little to do with market demand. It is a way of generating free cash. The 250% growth in copper trading that occurred in the first quarter of 2014 is not explicable by increased demand. Defaults by Chinese importers on contracted soybean imports in April suggested that not all soy is for consumption either. The soy defaults were a warning sign that banks may be over-confident about the value of commodities held as collateral. The campaigns against corruption may also have been the proximate cause of the Qingdao investigation. Whatever it was, the ultimate cause is the tightening of domestic credit, leading agile financial innovators to conjure up new mechanisms to seek international sources of cash.

The Qingdao scandal

Current revelations began in Qingdao, when metal used to collateralize debt for a company called Desheng Mining turned out not to be in the warehouse. Desheng Mining was wrapped up in a corruption investigation targeting the Party secretary of Xining, the capital of Qinghai Province. Initially, it seemed that the damage would be limited: traders said that Qingdao was a very small port for copper, and that counterfeit warehouse certificates (used to back the trades) are uncommon in copper. Consensus suggested that the whole Qingdao operation might be part of a political vendetta expressed in a focused anti-corruption initiative.

Then reporters noticed that China’s National Auditor’s Report for 2013 had highlighted over RMB 94 bln in falsified gold trades. The 2013 audit report section 6 on State-Owned Financial Institutions reads:

“1. Financial innovation is irregular, and some institutions circumvent regulation and supervision of loans. . . . There were companies that used “empty transfers” as an arbitrage method, and a sample of accounts since 2012 of 25 gold and jewelry companies indicated that they used “virtual” trading platforms to engage in repeated cycles of cross-border, cross-currency trades worth RMB 94.4 bln and earn RMB 900 mln on the currency and rate spreads.”

This terse formal report raises all key aspects of the problem—the virtual trading platforms, the related-party interests, the evasion of regulation and supervision, the involvement of local government financing platforms, and ultimately the goal of arbitraging interest rates. The only dimension not explored is the massive embezzlement of the proceeds.

In 2013, China became the world’s largest market for gold, buying 1,132 tons, for 26% of global private sector demand. The World Gold Council attributed this buying to a cultural belief in gold and rising real incomes, and it projected the 2017 market at 1,350 tons; that may turn out to be less cultural than they thought. Incidentally, the previous year in which China accounted for such a high portion of global demand was 1997, just before the Asian financial crisis.

After gold came rubber: stores of rubber have fallen about 10% in June, as authorities scrutinized the hypothecation of rubber for loans; Chinese news reports say that about 14% of rubber is used as collateral for loans.

The copper story is evident from the three charts below. Copper traders fund import of the metal with an LOC, sell a warrant to an offshore subsidiary, and then collateralize the shipment for debt, the proceeds of which go into high-yield loans in the property sector. In January, tighter credit meant that developers and LGFVs were forced to pay escalating rates for short-term loans. Imported commodity-based borrowing financed a lot of those loans. It was not just a coincidence that copper imports rose to record highs as domestic sources of credit declined.

Toward the end of February, weakening currency depressed the appetite for traders to hold losing positions. Copper trading activity rose, warrants fell, and the price of copper started to slide down, gearing up the exposure to foreign debt held with RMB sources of revenue.

In general, commodity imports soared in January and February, as it became harder to capture loans for purely domestic projects. The currency, which depreciated through March, made those trades unattractive in April and May.

Foreign banks

To what extent foreign banks are exposed to speculative finance that has been hypothecated many times over is perhaps impossible to untangle. At the end of 2013, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority published an estimate that HKD 3.6 tln, or 22% of Hong Kong’s banking assets, were exposed to the mainland, HKD 313 bln of that in trade finance and HKD 441 bln in off-balance-sheet items that are mostly related to trade.

Standard Chartered, in its June 26 report, warned obliquely of exposure to China but told investors that it has only USD 250 mln exposed to the Chinese copper trade. Stanchart said that impairment on loans from other territories would be in the high teens, even as it said that it would see high earnings from the Chinese wealth management market.

Quiet defaults?

Between the start of May and mid-June, the PBOC injected RMB 1.08 tln through various channels and left RMB 437 bln in the market indefinitely. The new re-lending facility created through the Construction Bank also added higher-quality backing to much of the credit in the market. Monetary authorities seem to be selling some reserves, working as well to maintain an exchange rate of 6.22, just above the 6.23 level at which QE3 commenced in 2012, bringing the latest rush of hot capital into the country.

All this monetary activity was directed at the June 25 audit date on which, in 2013, interbank defaults occurred. But expanding the long-term money supply by half a trillion RMB suggests that the bank was doing more than preventing new defaults: deep in the background, there must be local banks in danger of going broke under the combined impact of the commodity-related defaults and property defaults.

Chinese commodities traders say that foreign banks will no longer finance commodities deals and that Chinese banks have become much more conservative in opening letters of credit, shortening the average term to 90 days and refusing LOCs to small companies with low capitalization. The unwinding of these instruments seems likely to express itself in lower volumes of trade and tighter financing conditions in China.

For the rest of the world, that means that the great Chinese commodities expansion is over. On the other hand, the growth and risks of China’s foreign borrowing may just be beginning.

What does this say about quality of debt generally in China? We resolve the measure down to two things, the creditworthiness of the borrower and the market value of the assets that collateralize the debt. In China, the former is a political question for entities that borrow at scale, because their solvency ultimately depends on whether their outsize debt is likely to be ‘sovereignized’ or diffused by the powers that be.

For the latter, the troublesome reality is that the commodity borrowing crisis has revealed not only large-scale fraudulent use of warehouse receipts and letters of credit but a pervasive lack of controls in the use of commodity stocks as bank assets across the board.

Ultimately, in the commodity-based banking market, how much real market value underlies how much debt? We saw with Credit Equals Gold #1 one answer to that question for a coal-based wealth management product that was wildly out of line.

Moreover, we ask this same question about the property market which we have discussed at length in these reports. Ultimately, how much real value underlies how much debt? For pricing purposes, property lacks the fungibility of commodities, so the underlying value calculation is distorted by a different set of devices.

The risks of the commodity-based and property-based credit markets in China are additive, and a risk assessment for the economy overall needs to encompass both. Between these two colossal monuments of debt, commodity-based and property-based, China finds itself facing real asset insufficiency that might well eclipse the Great Wall in gobsmacking scale.

Goodbye Alcoa Aluminum, hello Alcoa

Written by Paul Adkins

Alcoa’s announcement last week that it is paying almost $3 billion for a aerospace parts manufacturer is a sure sign of a longer-term strategy to take the company away from aluminium.

Firth Rixson, the company at the centre of the takeover, uses little aluminium in its products. But it is at the core of the aerospace parts market, producing jet engine blades. “We are really material-agnostic,” Klaus Kleinfeld said in an interview on Thursday.

According to press reports, Alcoa changed its company description - the piece that goes at the bottom of press releases.

Instead of “the world’s leading producer of primary and fabricated aluminum,” Alcoa now calls itself “a global leader in lightweight metals engineering and manufacturing.”

Interesting that this new self portrait does not contain the word aluminium, and more interesting that it does not mention extraction, refining or smelting. By its own description Alcoa now seems happy to talk about its downstream activities.

There’s been speculation around the industry for almost a year now, that Alcoa would eventually syphon off the primary metal part of the business. That step may still be a long time away, but these moves by Alcoa do suggest that it’s not impossible.

Still, investor seem happy with the result, with the share price now at new yearly highs.

Aluminium production hit bottom in May

Written by Richard Lu

Aluminium production continued to fall in May and recorded a 4-month low of about 69,000t per day*. If you are wondering why, we would encourage you to take a look at the following charts made by AZ China.

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Even though the Shanghai price had improved a little since April and remained stable in May, more than 75% of the smelters continued to run at a loss. As a result, more than 1.5Mt of operating capacity was idled or closed over the last five months .

We believe that production rates have reached the bottom and will start turning around from June. New capacities from the Xinjiang Province were gradually released and have become fully operational and some smelters in high power cost areas began to resume production as well, supported by local governments in the form of power subsidies. However, we believe those subsidies won’t last long.

The improved HSBC manufacturing PMI stats may have indicated that China’s economy will perform better, which is in line with the convention that 2H is usually better than 1H to meet the annual targets set at the beginning of the year. An improving China economy may help the aluminium market in terms of more targeted assistance being given. However, if the government is determined to play tough on cooling the property market, the largest sector for aluminium consumption, the increasing aluminium supply requirements could eventually go against those local government policies.

* China recorded 1.898 million tonnes production for May, but that does not include the Hongqiao smelters, which add another 240,000t per month.

At some point, we expect less and less government intervention in the China market, so perhaps leaving it alone is the best way to protect China’s aluminum industry.

Chalco to create an integrated aluminium plant in Shanxi province

Written by June Wang

A domestic Chinese industry portal reported yesterday that Chalco is going to invest $9.25 Bln in Shanxi before 2020. (We have posted the report details below)

“Aluminum Corporation of China will invest 57 billion yuan ($9.25 billion) in Shanxi before 2020 to build an advanced aluminum recycling industry base” the company said on its website.

“In accordance with its cooperation framework agreement with the provincial government of Shanxi, the company will develop 2 million tpy-aluminum capacity via capacity replacement, build a 10 million tpy-coal mine and coal washing plant, a 3.5 million kw low-calorific value coal-fired power plant, and a 1 million-tpy high-end aluminum fabrication project.”

Perhaps you have thought the same questions as us after reading the English language version of this report. By examining the original announcement, we found this most pertinent sentence (our translation.)

“The 2 million tpy aluminum capacity will be … through developing old equipment, not as a new project.”

This is the first time in more than 10 years that we have seen this sort of investment in China. Back in the early part of the previous decade, Chinese aluminium companies invested heavily in converting existing plants to pre-bake technology, to get around the Government’s ban on Soderberg technology. Now, Chalco is taking an old plant and significantly upgrading it to modern standards (though, interestingly Chalco refrained from naming which of its two Shanxi smelters would get the upgrade.) Based on the rest of the statement, this project will deploy the best technology for emissions control, clean-coal technology and other high level standards. This project is not unlike what Rio Tinto Alcan has done at Kitimat in Western Canada.

We can’t help but applaud this profound and significant agreement, although it will take many years to complete, but it is a good start! The present capacity of Shanxi province is a little more than 1 million tonnes, but by 2020 that number could be twice that amount, just from Chalco’s contribution. So what’s the next step for China’s aluminum industry? We will keep an eye on this and let you know!

Note: if you are confused by various online industry news sources, you are welcome to consult with us. AZ China is a better source for accurate consolidated news. News that makes sense!

Weekly report review: weak market behind stable prices?

Written by June Wang

Dear readers, here is our latest “Weekly Report Review” . If you have any questions or requirements please tell us, thanks!

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Energy

With Iraq tensions increasing, crude oil prices climbed to a new level and stood at $107.26/t last week. Focussing on the domestic market, the coal price fell further due to high inventory. A situation that leads traders with a negative outlook to think the price will go down.

Alumina and aluminium

Import prices remained stable last week, however imported material is uncompetitive when compared with domestic alumina. For aluminum, there is no positive change in the downstream market. On-demand procurement volumes were limited to sustain price increase. Last week, aluminum price went down slightly.

Raw material of AL

Although downstream demand continued be weak, refineries controlled their output to a relatively low level which helped petcoke prices stabilize. With oversupply and tighter cash-flow within the industry, they can’t push the prices up easily. Additionally, as demand for aluminum in the main market has shown no sign of a rebound, the price might drop again.

ALF3 price continued to rise due to the low inventory levels, increasing by ¥50/t WoW. For good news, fluorspar prices started to rise slightly.

Alumina becomes more popular than bauxite due to Indonesian export ban

Written by Richard Lu

Alumina is becoming more popular than bauxite, thanks to the Indonesian export ban.

It has been about half a year since the ban took effect and consequently, the bauxite import levels fell considerably and consecutively since February, and there have been no imports of Indonesian bauxite since April.

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However, alumina imports continued to be stronger than the same period of last year.

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The comparison between the performance of bauxite and alumina clearly shows that alumina now has a more competitive edge over bauxite in terms of cost and also indicates it is unlikely that the bauxite imports will increase in the short term.

Currently, both China domestically-produced and imported alumina are sold at approximately US$420/t which puts a firm cap on top of the bauxite price. Given that sea freight from more remote areas such as Africa and South America is more than double that from Indonesia and Australia, the highest China landed price of bauxite reached about US$90/t. This means that after adding VAT (Value Added Tax) , the cost could easily be over US$110/t. Therefore, the alumina cost could break US$470/t, assuming 2t bauxite are required to produce 1t alumina.

The 50 dollars gap is only a rough estimation, but it’s seems obvious that importing alumina directly from Australia makes more sense at present. Whilst the strategic importance of raw materials should be considered, we would say the import of bauxite won’t recover until the alumina price increases significantly which is unlikely to happen in the near future.

Subsidies re-appear: a pain killer in place of surgery

Written by June Wang

Sometimes, tough medicine is needed. But right now, in the Chinese aluminium industry, pain killers are being handed out, when what’s really needed is some stronger medicine.

Since the beginning of June 2014, more and more smelters that shut down in recent months now plan to restart. The motivation was not the rising prices or increasing demand, but local government pressure. In exchange for restarting, local governments will guarantee a subsidy to reduce the losses. For instance, most smelters in Gansu province have received a subsidy of 0.03/kwh, especially for non-captive power plant smelters. Meanwhile, Guizhou province has issued subsidies to Chalco Guizhou, Chalco ZunYi aluminum, and others. The rumored subsidy was 0.12/kwh in Guizhou province because their original power price was much higher than other provinces.

These subsidies are just a pain-killer which might bring more potential painful problems.

Local governments have to protect their tax revenue, and they have to protect jobs. Many aluminium smelters are the hub of local industrial zones, with feeder industries that employ ten times the number of employees in a smelters. But with more smelters restarting, aluminium prices will fall once again. Soon the low metal price will trigger other capacity shutdowns - and a vicious cycle begins!

In short, the subsidy may ease the current pain, but for a long- term solution, surgery is needed, not just medicine.

As always, these actions from local governments are not uniform. Based on our analysis, the subsidies so far seem to be favouring state owned enterprises. The small guys are missing out.

 

Weekly China Market Review: Stable market under few positives

Written by June Wang

Dear readers, our latest “Weekly Report Review” has been published. if you have any questions, please tell us. Thanks!

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Energy

Iraq tensions drove oil price up sharply last week. But domestic coal prices remain stable. Although coal consumption is increasing in summer, but potential negative factors continued to work, especially high level stock and decreasing ship transport fee.

AL

Compared with increasing spot alumina price, limited trade volumes of imported alumina continued to suppress prices, which still remain at a low level. However, aluminium prices continued to climb slightly.

Raw material of AL

After a adjustment in petcoke prices, last week both anode and fuel grade coke prices remained stable. But for anodes, because of long term weak demand and reducing exports, anode prices declined last week.

For other product, ALF3 rose further last week due to the low level inventory. The total aluminum fluoride stocks held by the 17 main plants decreased by compared with April.

For more information on subscribing to this report and getting the full picture, contact us at blackchina@az-china.com.

Aluminium output suffers as World Cup begins…

Written by Paul Adkins

Talk about priorities - the “Beautiful Game” is causing aluminium output to suffer!

A newspaper report today says that in Ghana, the local aluminium company, Volta, has been asked to cut back on its electricity consumption, because more power is needed to satisfy the huge demand for electricity during games in which Ghana is taking part. Neighbouring Ivory Coast will supply electricity to cope with the peak times, as its games are not scheduled at the same time.

Okay, so I grant you that Ghana’s aluminium supply is not a global game changer, but such is the pulling power of FIFA and football. Here we have national economies experiencing a small shock thanks to a sport. In a similar display of pragmatic priorities, the coup leaders in Thailand have announced that the curfew has been lifted for the World Cup. And no wonder - games will be televised at awful times, 11pm, 2am and 5am, thanks to the time zone differences.

AZ China has an excellent reputation for its forecasts and outlooks, so here are our tips for the carnival -

  1. Australia to go through the 3 initial games without scoring a single goal (sigh)
  2. Brazil to score much egg on face with venues not complete, transport links not working and too much Cachacha
  3. Germany to take home the silverware. Spain as the possible spoiler.

 

 

 

Yantai aluminium conference

Written by June Wang

I attended the conference “World Aluminium Raw Material Summit 2014” in Yantai, Shandong province. And take back some useful information to share with you.

During the welcome buffet on May 28, there were almost no delegates present, because most of them had been invited by Yantai Port to a reception that same day. Finally the conference reception was attended by the organising staff plus a handful of us who had not received an invitation from Yantai Port.

The official conference started the next day. Although the conference topic is about aluminium and raw material, the content mainly lean to bauxite and the Indonesia export ban. And the presentations were more like a trade fair, with speakers directly and openly promoting their bauxite. Only two papers - “Analysis on domestic and overseas macro-economy trend and policy orientation in 2014” and “Resource challenges for Chinese industry and coal ash application progress” delivered by Zhang liqun and Yin Zhonglin respectively - were useful.

  • Zhang Liqun, Macro–economic research department, Chinese State Council Development Research Centre. He had a positive attitude on the China economy, especially the housing market. He said although the consumption structure with focuses of housing and automobiles is adjusted, and growth for the two will fall, demand remains and will grow. So it will have no effect in the first and second-tier cities, and take limited effect on the third and local cities.
  • Yin Zhonglin, Director of Alumina Research Division, Chalco Zhengzhou Research Institute. He mentioned that in order to cope with Indonesia export ban, domestic companies are searching for a new way for aluminum industry, to increase domestic exploration and go abroad to secure bauxite. He mentioned in his speech, the total number of companies who build new alumina plants and obtaining bauxite resources aboard is 13. They mainly located in Indonesia, Australia, Guinea, Fiji and other countries. About coal ash, because of technology and poor profitability, it hasn’t achieved a larger scale. So far, two companies built in inner Mongolia had started, another four refiners are still in the testing progress.

The mood at the conference concerning the outlook was surprisingly positive. Although the aluminium market dropped to a worse situation under high energy costs and oversupply along with slowing macro-economic conditions and tight lending policies, smelters still have positive expectations for the future.