Authors
Axel WION, Armando LUCIANO, Sofia Noelle GONZALEZ, PROFUNDO: Barbara KUEPPER, Linus LINNAEUS TANNOR & Myriam VANDER STICHELE
Related Organizations
- Pages
- 4
- Published in
- Belgium
Files
Table of Contents
- CONTENTS 5
- List of abbreviations and acronyms 7
- List of boxes 10
- List of figures 10
- List of tables 10
- Acknowledgements 12
- Executive summary 13
- 1. State of the art — global commodity traders 16
- 1.1. ABCDs Company profiles 16
- 1.1.1. ARCHER DANIELS MIDLAND (ADM) 17
- 1.1.2. BUNGE 18
- 1.1.3. CARGILL 19
- 1.1.4. LOUIS DREYFUS COMPANY (LDC) 19
- 1.2. Importance of top traders in bulk commodities trade 20
- 1.3. The role of commodity traders in managing food stocks and market effects 23
- KEY FINDINGS 16
- 2. Trends and challenges shaping Agri-commodity trading 27
- 2.1. Integration and consolidation trends 28
- 2.2. Vertical integration of up- and downstream segments 29
- 2.2.1. Upstream commodity production 29
- a. ADM 30
- b. BUNGE 30
- c. CARGILL 30
- d. LDC 30
- e. Regenerative agriculture involvement 31
- 2.2.2. Financing and inputs for producers 31
- 2.2.3. Downstream processing and marketing 32
- a. ADM 32
- b. BUNGE 32
- c. CARGILL 33
- d. LDC 33
- 2.3. Horizontal expansion and diversification 33
- a. ADM 34
- b. BUNGE 34
- c. CARGILL 34
- d. LDC 35
- 2.4. Corporate concentration 36
- 2.4.1. Impact on prices 36
- 2.4.2. Limiting marketing concentration 37
- 2.5. Financialisation 38
- 2.5.1. The European milling wheat derivatives market23F 39
- 2.5.2. Non-hedging speculative financial participants 39
- 2.5.3. The dominance of speculative non-hedging participants 41
- 2.5.4. No food crisis but a price crisis? 44
- 2.6. New rival agri-commodity firms 46
- 2.6.1. Drivers of growth 46
- a. Meeting demand 47
- b. Marketing supply 48
- c. Strategic partnerships 48
- 2.6.2. COFCO International (China) 48
- 2.6.3. Wilmar International (Singapore) 51
- 2.6.4. Olam Group (Singapore) 52
- 2.6.5. Kernel (Ukraine) 53
- KEY FINDINGS 27
- 3. Regulatory state of play 55
- 3.1. Regulatory framework in the European Union 56
- a. Agri-commodity trade and stockholding 56
- b. Financial markets 58
- 3.2. Regulatory framework in the United States 61
- 3.3. Regulatory framework in Switzerland 62
- 3.4. Fitness of existing measures 62
- KEY FINDINGS 55
- 4. POLICY recommendations: Potential for monitoring, A focus on Accountability and Transparency 64
- 4.1. Transparency of physical markets 65
- 4.2. Disclosure of financial risks 66
- 4.3. Ensuring integrity of derivatives markets and orderly pricing 67
- 4.4. Investigating and regulating market concentration 68
- KEY FINDINGS 64
- 5. Conclusions 70
- References 71
- ANNEX 1 – Literature List Derivatives Trade and Speculation 90
- ANNEX 2 – ABCD battlecards 92
- ANNEX 3 – Vertical integration 95
- ANNEX 4 – Horizontal expansion AND Diversification 97
- ANNEX 5 – WTO on food stockholding 98