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Goldman Sachs looks to divest metals warehousing

  • Spanish Market: Metals, Petroleum coke
  • 21/05/14

Investment bank Goldman Sachs has confirmed it is exploring selling its London Metal Exchange (LME) warehousing business, an arm of its operations that has exposed the bank to controversy over the past year as a result of lengthy queues for delivering aluminium.

The company declined to comment on whether the recent scrutiny from regulators and lawsuits brought by aluminium buyers prompted it to begin the formal sales process for Metro International Trade Services, a global warehouse operator specializing in storing non-ferrous metals for the LME. Metro "is not strategic to our client activities" and Goldman Sachs is required to only hold the warehouse operator as an investment for a certain period of time, the company said. The bank acquired Metro in 2010.

"The firm has concluded that this is the right time to explore a sale, given recent interest by potential buyers," Goldman Sachs said.

Goldman Sachs has been criticized since last summer because Metro's Detroit warehouse has been a main contributor to lengthy queues blamed for distorting LME aluminium pricing. The wait time for primary aluminium in April at Detroit was almost two years, according to the LME's most recent report.

The millions of tonnes trapped in warehouses, particularly in Detroit and a warehouse in Vlissingen, Netherlands, have created an artificial shortage of the metal. As a result, the premium that aluminium buyers pay to receive physical delivery has skyrocketed to about 20pc of the LME price, creating billions of dollars in un-hedgeable risk for buyers like rolled products producer Novelis.

Some aluminium buyers have accused warehouse operators and financial players like Goldman of manipulating the market and driving up the overall cost of aluminium, profiting off warehouse rents and creating a windfall for primary producers. But producers counter that even with the premium added in, about 4pc of global smelting capacity is still operating at a loss.

Hydro Aluminum Metals USA president Matt Aboud, speaking at the American Metal Market 13th Aluminum Summit in Philadelphia last week, criticized media reports that have promoted the idea that Goldman's actions drive up the consumer's cost for aluminium. "The story sounds more sexy when it is Goldman Sachs is manipulating the market. It is much less sexy when it is MillerCoors cannot hedge the midwest premium," Aboud said.

Other market observers have said queues have grown not so much because of warehouses like Metro trying to profit from rents but because traders are taking advantage of a profitable financial trade made possible by the US Federal Reserve's cheap money policy of the post-recession era.

"I think really the LME is kind of stuck, it has become a victim of the Federal Reserve," senior independent commodity consultant for financial services firm INTL FCStone Edward Meir said. With the current LME cash price around $1,740/t and the May 2015 price at $1,862/t, a trader who can hold the metal in a warehouse can collect a 7pc yield. "If you can borrow money at zero, like Goldman Sachs, and you own the warehouse, and you have a producer or two in your pocket, that is a pretty nice trade," Meir said.

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