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Commodities
Commodities and Commodity
Markets
These
are markets
where raw or primary products are exchanged.
All of these raw commodities are traded on regulated
commodities exchanges, in which they are bought and sold in
standardized contracts.
The History of
Commodities
The modern commodity markets have their
roots in the trading of agricultural products.
While wheat
and corn, cattle and pigs, were widely traded using standard
instruments in the 19th century in the United States, other
basic foodstuffs such as soybeans were only added quite
recently in most markets. For a commodity market to be
established, there must be very broad consensus on the
variations in the product that make it acceptable for one
purpose or another.
The economic impact of the
development of commodity markets is hard to over-estimate.
Through the 19th century "the exchanges became effective
spokesmen for, and innovators of, improvements in
transportation, warehousing, and financing, which paved the
way to expanded interstate and international trade."
Early History of Commodity Markets Historically,
dating from ancient Sumerian use of sheep or goats, or other
peoples using pigs, rare seashells, or other items as
commodity money, people have sought ways to standardize and
trade contracts in the delivery of such items, to render
trade itself more smooth and predictable.
Commodity money and
commodity markets in a crude early form are believed to have
originated in Sumer where small baked clay tokens in the
shape of sheep or goats were used in trade. Sealed in clay
vessels with a certain number of such tokens, with that
number written on the outside, they represented a promise to
deliver that number. This made them a form of commodity
money - more than an "I.O.U." but less than a guarantee by a
nation-state or bank. However, they were also known to
contain promises of time and date of delivery - this made
them like a modern futures contract. Regardless of the
details, it was only possible to verify the number of tokens
inside by shaking the vessel or by breaking it, at which
point the number or terms written on the outside became
subject to doubt. Eventually the tokens disappeared, but the
contracts remained on flat tablets. This represented the
first system of commodity accounting.

However, the
Commodity status of living things is always subject to doubt
- it was hard to validate the health or existence of sheep
or goats. Excuses for non-delivery were not unknown, and
there are recovered Sumerian letters that complain of sickly
goats, sheep that had already been fleeced, etc.
If a seller's reputation
was good, individual "backers" or "bankers" could decide to
take the risk of "clearing" a trade. The observation that
trust is always required between market participants later
led to credit money. But until relatively modern times,
communication and credit were primitive.
Classical
civilizations built complex global markets trading gold or
silver for spices, cloth, wood and weapons, most of which
had standards of quality and timeliness. Considering the
many hazards of climate, piracy, theft and abuse of military
fiat by rulers of kingdoms along the trade routes, it was a
major focus of these civilizations to keep markets open and
trading in these scarce commodities. Reputation and clearing
became central concerns, and the states which could handle
them most effectively became very powerful empires, trusted
by many peoples to manage and mediate trade and commerce.
Investment Returns This is a much-debated
topic amongst academia. It is generally agreed that
commodities have an expected return of 5% in real terms
which is based on the risk premium for 116 different
commodities weighted equally since 1888 (Source Report
219171-Wharton Business School). It is common for investment
professionals to mistakenly claim there is no risk premium
in commodities.
Spot Trading Spot trading
is any transaction where delivery either takes place
immediately, or if there is a minimum lag, due to technical
constraints, between the trade and delivery. Commodities
constitute the only spot markets which have existed nearly
throughout the history of humankind.
Forward Contracts
A forward contract is an agreement between two parties to
exchange at some fixed future date a given quantity of a
commodity for a price defined today. The fixed price today
is known as the forward price.
Futures Contracts
A futures contract has the same general features as a
forward contract but is transacted through a futures
exchange.
Commodity and Futures contracts are based
on what’s termed "Forward" Contracts. Early on these
"forward" contracts (agreements to buy now, pay and deliver
later) were used as a way of getting products from producer
to the consumer. These typically were only for food and
agricultural Products. Forward contracts have evolved and
have been standardized into what we know today as futures
contracts. Although more complex today, early “Forward”
contracts for example, were used for rice in seventeenth
century Japan. Modern "forward", or futures agreements,
began in Chicago in the 1840s, with the appearance of the
railroads. Chicago, being centrally located, emerged as the
hub between Midwestern farmers and producers and the east
coast consumer population centers.
Hedging
"Hedging", a common (and sometimes mandatory) practice of
farming cooperatives, insures against a poor harvest by
purchasing futures contracts in the same commodity. If the
cooperative has significantly less of its product to sell
due to weather or insects, it makes up for that loss with a
profit on the markets, since the overall
supply of the crop is short everywhere that suffered the
same conditions.
Whole developing nations may be
especially vulnerable, and even their currency tends to be
tied to the price of those particular commodity items until
it manages to be a fully developed nation. For example, one
could see the nominally fiat money of Cuba as being tied to
sugar prices, since a lack of hard currency paying for sugar
means less foreign goods per peso in Cuba itself. In effect,
Cuba needs a hedge against a drop in sugar prices, if it
wishes to maintain a stable quality of life for its
citizens.
Delivery and Condition Guarantees
In addition, delivery day, method of settlement and delivery
point must all be specified. Typically, trading must end two
(or more) business days prior to the delivery day, so that
the routing of the shipment can be finalized via ship or
rail, and payment can be settled when the contract arrives
at any delivery point.
Standardization
U.S. soybean futures, for example, are of standard grade if
they are "GMO or a mixture of GMO and Non-GMO No. 2 yellow
soybeans of Indiana, Ohio and Michigan origin produced in
the U.S.A. (Non-screened, stored in silo)," and of
deliverable grade if they are "GMO or a mixture of GMO and
Non-GMO No. 2 yellow soybeans of Iowa, Illinois and
Wisconsin origin produced in the U.S.A. (Non-screened,
stored in silo)." Note the distinction between states, and
the need to clearly mention their status as "GMO"
("Genetically Modified Organism") which makes them
unacceptable to most "organic" food buyers.
Similar
specifications apply for cotton, orange juice, cocoa, sugar,
wheat, corn, barley, pork bellies, milk, feedstuffs, fruits,
vegetables, other grains, other beans, hay, other livestock,
meats, poultry, eggs, or any other commodity which is so
traded.
The concept of an
interchangeable deliverable or guaranteed delivery is always
to some degree a fiction. Trade in commodities is like trade
in any other physical product or service. No magic of the
commodity contract itself makes "units" of the product
totally uniform nor gets it to the delivery point safely and
on time.
Regulation of Commodity Markets
Cotton, kilowatt-hours of electricity, board feet of wood,
long distance minutes, royalty payments due on artists'
works, and other products and services have been traded on
markets of varying scale, with varying degrees of success.
One issue that presents major difficulty for creators of
such instruments is the liability accruing to the purchaser.
Unless the product or service can be guaranteed or insured
to be free of liability based on where it came from and how
it got to market, e.g. kilowatts must come to market free
from legitimate claims for smog death from coal burning
plants, wood must be free from claims that it comes from
protected forests, royalty payments must be free of claims
of plagiarism or piracy, it becomes impossible for sellers
to guarantee a uniform delivery.
Generally,
governments must provide a common regulatory or insurance
standard and some release of liability, or at least a
backing of the insurers, before a commodity market can begin
trading. This is a major source of controversy in for
instance the energy market, where desirability of different
kinds of power generation varies drastically. In some
markets, e.g. Toronto, Canada, surveys established that
customers would pay 10-15% more for energy that was not from
coal or nuclear, but strictly from renewable sources such as
wind.
In the United States, the principal regulator
of commodity and futures markets is the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission.
Proliferation of
Contracts, Terms, and Derivatives However, if there
are two or more standards of risk or quality, as there seem
to be for electricity or soybeans, it is relatively easy to
establish two different contracts to trade in the more and
less desirable deliverable separately. If the consumer
acceptance and liability problems can be solved, the product
can be made interchangeable, and trading in such units can
begin.
Since the detailed concerns of industrial and
consumer markets vary widely, so do the contracts, and
"grades" tend to vary significantly from country to country.
A proliferation of contract units, terms, and futures
contracts have evolved, combined into an extremely
sophisticated range of financial instruments.
These
are more than one-to-one representations of units of a given
type of commodity, and represent more than simple futures
contracts for future deliveries. These serve a variety of
purposes from simple gambling to price insurance.
The
underlying of futures contracts are no longer restricted to
commodities.
Oil Building on the
infrastructure and credit and settlement networks
established for food and precious metals, many such markets
have proliferated drastically in the late 20th century. Oil
was the first form of energy so widely traded, and the
fluctuations in the oil markets are of particular political
interest.
Some commodity market speculation is
directly related to the stability of certain states, e.g.
during the Persian Gulf War, speculation on the survival of
the regime of Saddam Hussein in Iraq. Similar political
stability concerns have from time to time driven the price
of oil. Some argue that this is not so much a commodity
market but more of an assassination market speculating on
the survival (or not) of Saddam or other leaders whose
personal decisions may cause oil supply to fluctuate by
military action.
The oil market is an exception. Most markets are not so tied
to the politics of volatile regions - even natural gas tends
to be more stable, as it is not traded across oceans by
tanker as extensively.
Commodity markets and
Protectionism Developing countries (democratic or
not) have been moved to harden their currencies, accept IMF
rules, join the WTO, and submit to a broad regime of reforms
that amount to a "hedge" against being isolated. China's
entry into the WTO signalled the end of truly isolated
nations entirely managing their own currency and affairs.
The need for stable currency and predictable clearing and
rules-based handling of trade disputes, has led to a global
trade hegemony - many nations "hedging" on a global scale
against each other's anticipated "protectionism", were they
to fail to join the WTO.
There are signs, however,
that this regime is far from perfect. U.S. trade sanctions
against Canadian softwood lumber (within NAFTA) and foreign
steel (except for NAFTA partners Canada and Mexico) in 2002
signalled a shift in policy towards a tougher regime perhaps
more driven by political concerns - jobs, industrial policy,
even sustainable forestry and logging practices.
Non-conventional Commodities Commodity thinking is undergoing a more direct
revival thanks to the theorists of "natural capital" whose
products, some economists argue, are the only genuine
commodities - air, water, and calories we consume being
mostly interchangeable when they are free of pollution or
disease. Whether we wish to think of these things as
tradeable commodities rather than birthrights has been a
major source of controversy in many nations.
Most
types of environmental economics consider the shift to
measuring them inevitable, arguing that reframing political
economy to consider the flow of these basic commodities
first and foremost, helps avoids use of any military fiat
except to protect "natural capital" itself, and basing
credit-worthiness more strictly on commitment to preserving
biodiversity aligns the long-term interests of ecoregions,
societies, and individuals. They seek relatively
conservative sustainable development schemes that would be
amenable to measuring well-being over long periods of time,
typically "seven generations", in line with Native American
thought.

Weather Trading
However, this is not the only way in which commodity
thinking interacts with ecologists' thinking. Hedging began
as a way to escape the consequences of damage done by
natural conditions. It has matured not only into a system of
interlocking guarantees, but also into a system of
indirectly trading on the actual damage done by weather,
using weather derivatives. For a price, this relieves the
purchaser of the following types of concerns:
"Will a
freeze hurt the Brazilian coffee crop? Will there be a
drought in the U.S. Corn Belt? What are the chances that we
will have a cold winter, driving natural gas prices higher
and creating havoc in Florida orange areas? What is the
status of El Niño?"
Emissions Trading
Weather trading is just one example of "negative
commodities", units of which represent harm rather than
good.
"Economy is three fifths of ecology" argues
Mike Nickerson, one of many economic theorists who holds
that nature's productive services and waste disposal
services are poorly accounted for. One way to fairly
allocate the waste disposal capacity of nature is "cap and
trade" market structure that is used to trade toxic
emissions rights in the United States, e.g. SO2. This is in
effect a "negative commodity", a right to throw something
away.
In this market, the
atmosphere's capacity to absorb certain amounts of
pollutants is measured, divided into units, and traded
amongst various market players. Those who emit more SO2 must
pay those who emit less. Critics of such schemes argue that
unauthorized or unregulated emissions still happen, and that
"grandfathering" schemes often permit major polluters, such
as the state governments' own agencies, or poorer countries,
to expand emissions and take jobs, while the SO2 output
still floats over the border and causes death.
In
practice, political pressure has overcome most such concerns
and it is questionable whether this is a capacity that
depends on U.S. clout: The Kyoto Protocol established a
similar market in global greenhouse gas emissions without
U.S. support. |
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