Why Europe Is Now The Marginal Buyer Of Commodities

 | Jul 16, 2021 07:35

The seaborne trade in dry bulk commodities provides a strong indication of the changing dynamics in global commodity demand. The import of dry bulk commodities (iron ore, coal, grains and minor bulks such as fertiliser) by ship accounts for approximately one-third of overall dry bulk trade, with the rest being transported across land across fixed routes borders (for example, by truck and rail).

The seaborne trade gives a strong indication of who the marginal buyer in the market is. That kind of information is important to know if you want to understand the motivations of different physical commodity market participants, and how committed they are.

Iron ore is the most important driver of dry bulk shipping demand, estimated to account for around 29% of demand by weight. Coal (both thermal and coking) is in second place with 17%, followed by grains (including corn, wheat, oilseeds and sugar) with 13%. The remaining 41% includes commodities such as steel products, forest & agricultural products, fertiliser, cement and petroleum coke among others, and are covered under the umbrella term of minor bulk commodities.

The chart below shows the annual incremental growth in dry bulk imports between 2007 and 2019 with China in red and the Rest of the World (RoW) in green. During that period China accounted for 55% of growth in global dry bulk commodity imports.

Apart from the disruption to global trade in the aftermath of the Great Financial Crisis (2009-10), the last time that China played the role of the marginal dry bulk importer was in 2014. Growth in fixed asset investment slumped to a 13 year low, while agricultural demand also slowed weighing on seaborne dry bulk commodity imports.