JPMorgan Chase & Co owned the London Metal Exchange (LME) nickel contracts that turned out to be backed by bags of stones rather than metal, people familiar with the matter said.
The LME last week announced that it had canceled nine nickel contracts — worth about US$1.3 million — after discovering “irregularities” at a warehouse, which Bloomberg has reported was owned by Access World.
The news has been met with shock in the metals world because LME contracts are generally viewed as beyond question.
JPMorgan was the owner of the nine invalidated contracts, the sources said.
The bank early last year registered the bags of material as being deliverable against LME contracts, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private information.
There was no suggestion that JPMorgan did anything wrong.
The material was already inside Access World’s warehouse in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, when the bank bought it several years ago, one of the people said.
Still, its central role in another nickel crisis will be a headache for the bank.
JPMorgan’s commodities business has been under scrutiny since last year’s nickel short squeeze on the LME, where it played a key part as the largest counterparty to Chinese tycoon Xiang Guangda’s (項光達) short position.
JPMorgan declined to comment.
The bank’s ownership of the nine invalidated nickel warrants was first reported by Fastmarkets.
Access World said it is inspecting the “warranted” bags of nickel briquettes at all of its locations, but believes that the issue that led to the nine warrants being suspended “is an isolated case and specific to one warehouse in Rotterdam.”
It was not clear whether the bags ever contained nickel, and whether the issue is a result of error, theft or fraud. Under the LME’s rules, warehouses are responsible for inspecting and verifying metal.
Warehouses are required to hold insurance, while physical metal traders typically are insured against risks such as theft.
The discovery has set off a wider scramble across the metals world, with warehouse companies racing over the weekend to inspect and weigh thousands of tonnes of metal after the LME asked them to verify all the nickel on warrant.
The LME has also been carrying out its own inspections in Europe and Asia, one of the people said.
So far, the mass inspection has found no other issues with LME material, the person said.
JPMorgan is the leading bank in metals markets, but it has been at the center of several high-profile crises in the past year
It reported a US$120 million loss related to nickel a year ago, in the wake of the short squeeze centered on Xiang and his company, Tsingshan Holding Group Co (青山控股).
TARIFF TRADE-OFF: Machinery exports to China dropped after Beijing ended its tariff reductions in June, while potential new tariffs fueled ‘front-loaded’ orders to the US The nation’s machinery exports to the US amounted to US$7.19 billion last year, surpassing the US$6.86 billion to China to become the largest export destination for the local machinery industry, the Taiwan Association of Machinery Industry (TAMI, 台灣機械公會) said in a report on Jan. 10. It came as some manufacturers brought forward or “front-loaded” US-bound shipments as required by customers ahead of potential tariffs imposed by the new US administration, the association said. During his campaign, US president-elect Donald Trump threatened tariffs of as high as 60 percent on Chinese goods and 10 percent to 20 percent on imports from other countries.
Taiwanese manufacturers have a chance to play a key role in the humanoid robot supply chain, Tongtai Machine and Tool Co (東台精機) chairman Yen Jui-hsiung (嚴瑞雄) said yesterday. That is because Taiwanese companies are capable of making key parts needed for humanoid robots to move, such as harmonic drives and planetary gearboxes, Yen said. This ability to produce these key elements could help Taiwanese manufacturers “become part of the US supply chain,” he added. Yen made the remarks a day after Nvidia Corp cofounder and chief executive officer Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) said his company and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) are jointly
United Microelectronics Corp (UMC, 聯電) expects its addressable market to grow by a low single-digit percentage this year, lower than the overall foundry industry’s 15 percent expansion and the global semiconductor industry’s 10 percent growth, the contract chipmaker said yesterday after reporting the worst profit in four-and-a-half years in the fourth quarter of last year. Growth would be fueled by demand for artificial intelligence (AI) servers, a moderate recovery in consumer electronics and an increase in semiconductor content, UMC said. “UMC’s goal is to outgrow our addressable market while maintaining our structural profitability,” UMC copresident Jason Wang (王石) told an online earnings
MARKET SHIFTS: Exports to the US soared more than 120 percent to almost one quarter, while ASEAN has steadily increased to 18.5 percent on rising tech sales The proportion of Taiwan’s exports directed to China, including Hong Kong, declined by more than 12 percentage points last year compared with its peak in 2020, the Ministry of Finance said on Thursday last week. The decrease reflects the ongoing restructuring of global supply chains, driven by escalating trade tensions between Beijing and Washington. Data compiled by the ministry showed China and Hong Kong accounted for 31.7 percent of Taiwan’s total outbound sales last year, a drop of 12.2 percentage points from a high of 43.9 percent in 2020. In addition to increasing trade conflicts between China and the US, the ministry said