As featured in Global Trade Review
Fraud Shockwaves: Banks Reassess Commodity Trade Finance in Singapore
A series of collapses involving major oil traders—including Hin Leong Trading and ZenRock—has shaken confidence in commodity trade finance—raising a critical question:
Are banks now rethinking the entire risk model behind commodity financing?
A Crisis That Triggered Fear
The article highlights how multiple trader collapses—amid the oil price crash and Covid-19—left banks exposed to significant fraud-related losses. Key impacts include:
• Large undisclosed losses suddenly revealed
• Loans tied to questionable or duplicated trades
• Growing uncertainty over borrower financial health
This has made banks increasingly cautious in their lending behaviour.
Fraud at the Core
Beyond market conditions, deeper structural issues were exposed:
• Multiple financing of the same cargo by different banks
• Fake or inflated trades used to secure funding
• In some cases, cargo that did not exist at all
These practices left lenders competing over the same collateral—or none at all.
Lending Comes to a Slowdown
As a result, banks reacted quickly:
• Tightening or halting new lending
• Reviewing commodity finance portfolios globally
• Focusing only on essential or low-risk transactions
In some cases, financing across commodities was described as “effectively coming to a halt.”
Liquidity Shock to the Market
The crisis created a broader liquidity issue:
• Reduced access to credit for traders
• Increased difficulty in rolling over financing
• Risk of knock-on effects across supply chains
Once liquidity tightened, underlying weaknesses in trading firms became more visible.
Regulators Step In
The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) responded by urging balance:
• Avoid blanket withdrawal from the sector
• Continue lending where risks are properly assessed
• Apply case-by-case credit evaluation
The aim is to prevent overreaction that could damage the wider economy.
Structural Weakness in Trade Finance
The situation exposed a deeper issue:
• Over-concentration of financing among a few traders
• Heavy reliance on documentation rather than verification
• Limited transparency in complex trade structures
When liquidity dries up, these weaknesses unravel quickly.
Industry-Wide Reassessment
Banks are now shifting their approach:
• Strengthening due diligence and verification processes
• Reassessing exposure to commodity traders
• Moving toward stricter risk controls
Some institutions are even reconsidering their long-term involvement in the sector.
Bottom Line
The collapse of Singapore’s oil traders is not just a market event—it is a wake-up call for global trade finance.
Banks are moving from trust-based lending → verification-driven risk management, driven by:
• Fraud exposure
• Weak transparency
• Systemic vulnerabilities
In commodity finance, confidence is no longer enough—proof and control are becoming critical.
Read the full article on Global Trade Review https://www.gtreview.com/news/asia/analysis-banks-nervous-over-fraud-losses-as-singapore-oil-traders-collapse/