Search This Blog

June 6, 2024

It’s not just Profits that are Record Levels @Trafigura…


Bloomberg reports that according to its half yearly report showed on Thursday, Trafigura was owed $10.5 billion by trade debtors at the end of March.

That's not unusual for the commodity trading giant, which sells hundreds of billions of dollars worth of oil, gas and metals every year. 

But this time a much larger proportion of them were late paying. Trafigura said that 15.8% of its receivables were more than 60 days overdue, nearly three times the level at the end of September. That implies that Trafigura had $1.66 billion of receivables more than 60 days overdue, up from $594 million six months earlier.


Even more unusual: Trafigura took a significant loss in relation to those receivables. It recognised expected credit losses of $330.2 million, up one hundred-fold from just $3.3 million at the end of September

In more than a decade of Trafigura accounts that are public, the company's expected credit loss on its receivables has never been higher than $6 million.

Trafigura's new CFO attributed the higher losses to the high prices of many commodities and the higher rates faced by their counterparties.

In its 2015 annual report the company even boasted that a historical analysis from 2000 to 2015 showed that Trafigura "has demonstrated that there is no significant expected credit risk arising from its trade receivable portfolio and therefore no expected credit loss."

But then again, as they say, "Past Performance is No Guarantee of Future Results"…

See the whole article on Bloomberg here:
Trafigura Has $1.7 Billion Headache After Surge in Overdue Debts

ShareThis

Tags

IFTTT Twitter MasterMetals News Gold MssterMetalsNews MasterMetalsNews mining stocks Commodities Mining GLD Silver Oil COPPER China Metals Dollar Energy Precious Metals MasterEnergy GDX trading Hedge Funds EV Battery Metals Finance exploration GDXJ Glencore USA ETF Platinum Africa Canada Nickel Technical Analysis Charts Chile Euro LME Lithium Latin America Australia BHP Base Metals Cobalt Futures Iron Ore Uranium central banks CME IPO Palladium RIO SIL SLV TSX middle east Asia Barrick DRC FED India PSLV Russia South Africa Trafigura Venezuela comex zinc Argentina Batteries Bonds Chavez Debt Ecuador Kinross PPLT Renewables currencies AEM Anglo American AngloGold Bitcoin Iran JPMorgan Chase Japan Mexico NEM Peru Switzerland TSXV VALE coal Agriculture BP Brazil EQX Education FCX Gas London Lundin Metals Streaming NYMEX Newmont Nuclear Oreninc PGM Roxgold Royalties Sprott Turkey UK Vitol WGC infographic Autonomous Vehicles Azimut Banks BlockChain CFTC CODELCO COT Cerrado Gold Colombia Cote d'Ivoire EDV Egypt Electricity FIL FSM Filo Financings GATA Goldman Sachs Guinea HFT IVN Indonesia Irak LSE LUG Loonie MENA Mongolia NGEx Oro PIIGS RUP Rare Earths REE Robert Friedland Rupert Resource S&P SQM Saudi Arabia Strategic Metals Tsingshan UAE VC VW Yuan money quebec rare earths 1971 1979 AAUC ADM AGI ALB ARIS ATY AU AUY AZM Abu Dhabi Agarwal Alaska Antimony BIS BTG Bill Clinton Bin Laden CBX CCB CITGO CMOC Cameco Cargill Cars Chuquicamata Clice Capital Cobalt27 CoronaVirus Covid19 Critical Metals Crypto DJIA DOJ DPM Defense Demographics Djibouti E-Waste EGO EM ESG El Dorado Endowments Environment Europe FVI Fav Finland Food ForEx Frank Giustra Freeport McMoran GBP GDP GFI GFMS GMIN Ghana Graphite Great Be Greece Green Energy Gundlach Gunvor HPX Haftium IAG IOC Inflation KGC KL Kazakhstan Kurdistan LBMA Louis Dreyfus Lunahuasi M&A MAKO MF Global Mercuria NDM Nigeria Northern Dynasty Oman Orion Osisko PDVSA PEA PEMEX PG Pebble Project Politics Private Equity Rabbit Recycling Repsol Research Rhenium Rhodium Rusal SBSW SKE SSRM SWF Sensors Shale TGZ Tech Tesla Texas Trump Ukraine VGCX VIX Victoria Gold WPM Warren Buffett XAU XGD XStrata YPF Yen Yukon Zambia diamonds spoofing stocks supply chain zinc News