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Thursday, March 28, 2024

“Sic Transit Gloria Pecuni” – LME Considering Ending Sterling, Allowing Renminbi Settlement

Courtesy of ZeroHedge. View original post here.

Submitted by Tyler Durden.

On a long enough timeline, all things come to an end. Even for such venerable venues as the London Metals Exchange, with its 130 year history, and its annual turnover of over $11 trillion in metal contracts, which also makes it the largest market for non-ferrous metals. As the English FT reminisces, “When the LME was established in 1877, Britain was one of the world’s most important manufacturing powerhouses, and the LME’s benchmark contracts for delivery in three months were designed to mirror the length of time needed to reach British ports for shipments of copper from Chile and tin from Malaysia.” Furthermore, in the beginning, and all the way through 1993, the flagship copper contract was denominated in sterling, at which point it was switched to the USD following the “Black Wednesday” ERM sterling crisis, courtesy of George Soros who made about $1 billion by shorting the GBP, and formally ended the sterling’s role as even an informal backup reserve currency. As of today, insult follows inury, as the LME has formally asked the members of the exchange to drop the sterling contract denomination (in addition to USD, EUR, and JPY contracts) and replace it with the Chinese renminbi. Why this sudden and dramatic, if gradual and tacit, admission that the CNY is the ascendent reserve currency? Because, as the FT reminds us, China has become the market for non-ferrous metals: it is “the dominant force in the market, accounting for more than 40 per cent of global demand for most metals and a rapidly increasing share of trading in LME futures.” Add that to yesterday’s news of a widening in the CNY band (which incidentally is much ado about nothing, at least for now: at best it will allow China to devalue its currency when and if it so desires much faster than before, much to Geithner’s final humiliation), and to the previously reported extensive network of bilateral CNY-based trade agreements already cris-crossing Asia, and one can see why if America is not worried about the reserve status of the dollar, it damn well should be.

From the FT:

The LME is asking its members as part of a survey to help the exchange design its planned new clearing house whether they would like the renminbi to be added to the roster of currencies on offer for settling and clearing, and sterling dropped. The LME plans to maintain its benchmark denominated in US dollars. “We are always looking at new ways to help the market,” the exchange said.

The move would be a final blow to sterling’s role in metals trading. The LME’s flagship copper contract was denominated in sterling until 1993, when it switched to dollars in the wake of the Black Wednesday sterling crisis.

The use of the UK currency to settle and clear LME contracts has dwindled to negligible levels in recent years, brokers say. “I haven’t traded a contract in sterling for five years,” said the head of one large LME brokerage.

Why China? Because, for better or worse, it has become the marginal buyer.

The use of the renminbi in commodities markets is, on the other hand, slowly increasing as China moves to internationalise its currency. Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing (HKEx) has announced plans for a range of renminbi-denominated commodity futures, while the Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange (HKMEx) is planning to launch renminbi gold and copper contracts.

The Chinese currency would need to become more freely tradable before it could be used for LME trading and settlement. Over the weekend Beijing announced the latest step in the internationalisation of the renminbi, widening its daily trading band.

The discussion at the LME reflects the growing involvement of Chinese companies on the exchange. The LME announced this month that Bank of China had applied to become its first Chinese member. It opened an office in Asia in 2010 and members of staff now have business cards printed in both English and Mandarin.

The implications, at least optically, need no further explanation. We would like to conclude with our favorite chart from JPMorgan, which we have dubbed sic transit gloria pecuni.

At this point we are fairly confident which currency is coming next in the new top right space (whether backed by hard assets, and in joint execution  with Russia and/or Germany, or not).

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