Commodity Trading & Hedging
Commodity trading and hedging manage price risk across energy (crude oil, LNG, refined products, electricity), metals (gold, copper, aluminium, nickel), and agricultural commodities (coffee, sugar, grains, edible oils). Dubai’s DMCC is the world’s largest free zone by company count (24,000+), with a significant concentration of commodity trading firms. The DGCX (Dubai Gold & Commodities Exchange) provides regional futures and options markets. The Gulf is naturally positioned at the intersection of commodity production (Gulf hydrocarbons, African minerals and agriculture) and consumption (Asian manufacturing and population demand).
Hedging Strategies
The advisory mandate covers: hedging programme design (identifying exposures, selecting instruments, implementing hedge execution), derivative instrument selection (futures, options, swaps, collars — each with distinct risk/reward profiles and accounting implications), counterparty risk management (credit evaluation of hedge counterparties), and the commodity trade finance structures that connect physical commodity flows to financial risk management. Our trade practice covers both physical and financial commodity markets across the Gulf-Asia-Africa corridors.
Commodity Finance
Commodity trade finance — providing the working capital that enables commodity traders to purchase, transport, and sell physical commodities — is a specialised lending discipline. Structures include: pre-export finance, inventory finance, receivables finance, and the prepayment facilities that commodity producers use to monetise future production. Islamic commodity finance (commodity murabaha, tawarruq) is a significant segment that Gulf banks and traders utilise.
Commodity trading is where the physical economy meets the financial economy — and the advisory mandate is to ensure that price risk is managed, trade is financed, and the Gulf’s natural positioning as a commodity hub is commercially exploited.