China Shadow Banking's Use Of Copper Collateral Threatens Red Metal

International Business Times

Published Mar 11, 2014 10:40AM ET

By Nat Rudarakanchana - A Chinese economic slowdown isn’t the only worry on the horizon for copper, as the industrial red metal sees fallout from its use as a financing tool in China, the world’s largest copper consumer.

Copper is used as collateral by companies and investors in China, in an effort to work around strict lending standards enforced by Beijing. Companies obtain a letter of credit, use it to import copper, sell the copper or deploy it as collateral, and often invest in higher yield assets, before paying back the loan, reports the Wall Street Journal.

China is the world’s largest consumer of copper and represents 40 percent of global copper demand. Copper is used in construction, power lines and refrigerators, among other things, so it is often taken as a gauge of industrial and business activity.

But Credit Suisse Group AG (VTX:CSGN) analysts estimate that a third of China’s imported copper is used in financing, while others believe that half of the copper in China’s warehouses is tied up in such financing deals.

The worry is then that a recent drop in copper prices could have a worsening effect on this financing system. Falling copper prices could force borrowers to post more collateral or sell more copper, and a sell-off could drop prices further. Banks may also be less willing to accept a cheaper metal as reliable collateral.