Global financial firms’ estimated $100 billion or more exposure to
Glencore Plc may draw more scrutiny as regulatory stress tests approach
after the commodity giant’s stock plunge this year, according to Bank of America Corp.
Bank
shareholders and regulators may be concerned that Glencore’s debt and
trade finance deals, of which a “significant majority” are unsecured,
will reveal higher-than-expected risk and require more capital once the
lenders are put through U.S. and U.K. stress tests, BofA analysts said
Wednesday. Adding an estimated $50 billion of committed lines to the
company’s own reported gross debt, the analysts say financial firms’
exposure may be three times larger than Glencore’s reported adjusted net
debt of less than $30 billion.
“The banking industry may have
significantly more exposure to Glencore than is generally appreciated in
the market,” analysts including Alastair Ryan and Michael Helsby said
in a note titled “The $100 Billion Gorilla In the Room.” The
commodity-price bust and “stress in Glencore’s share price and debt
spreads may spur a review by investors, supervisors and bank
management,” while “bank shareholders may pressure managements to reduce
exposures,” they said.
Loans to the industry have come under scrutiny as the price of oil, copper and other commodities fell to the lowest in 16 years amid weakening demand from China. Glencore, the Swiss producer and trader of commodities led by billionaire
Ivan Glasenberg, has pledged to cut debt by $10 billion and revealed
more detail about its financing to mollify investors. On Dec. 1, the
Bank of England releases its second round of stress tests, in which it
has pledged to examine U.K. banks’ commodities exposure.
Glencore spokesman
Charles Watenphul declined to comment on the BofA report. Glasenberg
told staff last week the company had $13.5 billion of available
liquidity and the company “will emerge even stronger.”
Stress Tests
The
shares climbed 6 percent to 124.8 pence at 1 p.m. in London and have
almost doubled from their low on Sept. 28, when Investec Plc analysts
wrote there may be little equity value in Glencore if low commodity
prices persist. Trading was briefly halted due to volatility twice on
Tuesday and the stock posted its biggest gain ever on Monday, though the
stock is still down by more than 50 percent in 2015.
“Gross
exposures will be considered by regulators in upcoming stress tests” as
opposed to banks’ net exposure, which can be offset by hedging, BofA
said. “Many banks may now be more carefully reviewing their exposure to
the commodities complex.”
The
analysts criticized the lack of disclosure from banks about their
commodity lending, but predict a change in policy to calm fears. “We
believe the numbers are big enough that banks will need to use
third-quarter disclosure to alleviate what we believe will be building
investor concerns,” Ryan and Helsby said.
Balance Sheet
On Tuesday, Glencore released a
document
explaining its financing, reiterating much information that was already
public knowledge, in response to recent criticism of a trading business
that some have labeled a “black box.” Glencore has argued that its
secured trade-financing from banks is of a high quality and has a low
rate of default.
“Losses on trade finance portfolios historically
have been low,” the Paris-based International Chamber of Commerce said
last year, citing a report from the Bank for International Settlements.
“Moreover, given their short-term nature, banks have been able to
quickly reduce their exposures in times of stress.”
Glencore has
$35 billion in bonds, $9 billion in bank borrowings, $8 billion in
available drawings and $1 billion in secured borrowings, in addition to
$50 billion in committed credit lines, against which it draws letters of
credit to finance trading, according to BofA. That compares with more
than $90 billion in property, plant, equipment and inventories.
Standard Chartered
More
than 60 banks participated in Glencore’s $15.25 billion revolving
credit facility raised in May, and the broad syndication of the debt
means that credit issues “would not likely be existential for any
individual bank,” the analysts said.
Standard Chartered Plc, which
has also been battered by the commodity rout, has the greatest exposure
to commodity traders among European banks with $1.9 billion of
syndicated loans, including more than $1 billion of loans and credit
lines to Trafigura Pte Ltd., Sanford C. Bernstein said Oct. 5. Credit
Agricole AG has the largest exposure of any bank to Glencore at $841
million, followed by HSBC Holdings Plc with $658 million, analyst Chirantan Barua said.
Peter
Grauer, the chairman of Bloomberg LP, the parent of Bloomberg News, is a
senior independent non-executive director at Glencore.
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