Structured Commodity Finance Conference 2018
London will play host to the Structured Commodity Finance Conference on the 17th – 18th April 2018, attracting high-level participants from the structured commodity space.
What is the Structured Commodity Finance Conference about?
Location: Sofitel London St James | London, United Kingdom | April 17-18
The Structured Commodity Finance is one of the most comprehensive updates on the state of global structured commodity finance, connecting traders, corporates and financiers.
The SCF event will run from the 17th – 18th April 2018 in London.
In a time of slight recovery in commodities markets, continued volatility and continued regulatory challenges in the commodity space, the structured commodity finance conference will cover critical topics. This year, the SCF conference will attract over 50 specialist speakers and 150 delegates.
Themes Covered:
Commodity Market Trends & The Global Economy | Changing Roles in Structured Commodity Finance | Structuring Across Commodities Markets |
---|---|---|
What are the forces currently governing global trade? | How are banks operating in light of continued heavy regulation ? | Which types are financing are proving most efficient? |
Blockchain finally in to the mainstream? | Trading houses in 2018 | When bonds, when do you turn to structured finance? |
Pricing Outlook | Alternative investors on the rise? | Will de-risking continue to grow among better pricing |
The future of production cuts | Where are the biggest gaps according to borrowers? | Restructurings: what lessons have been learned? |
What is structured commodity finance?
Structured Commodity Finance or SCF is a financing type used for hard and soft commodity finance, where most normal debt funding types won’t work. SCF looks at wider trading cycles, acknowledges the complexity of trading commodities on thin margins, and needs to take into account the volatile pricing changes of commodities. Commodity trade finance often concerns the short term financing needs between producers, processors, smelters or crushing facilities, other traders and end-users. Read our Structured Commodity Finance guide here.