Oil & products house of the year, Asia: BOCI
When Bank of China International decided to set up its commodities business seven years ago, it believed it could succeed in the market by leveraging the bank’s wider client base. As markets became more challenging for players across the industry, those roots have anchored the business, allowing it to weather the rougher seas.
“We already had very strong strategic relationships and deep understanding of our Asian client base, from credit in commercial banking to mergers and acquisitions, and bond issuance in capital markets,” says Kng Hwee Peng, head of energy trading, Singapore, at BOCI. “Headquartered in Asia with strong local presence and commitment from senior management, we have a clear competitive edge in servicing our Chinese clients, and this distinguishes us from our western competitors who have been dominating the commodities space.”
However, it is the firm’s ability to deliver product based upon those relationships that has made it stand out. Many end-users are looking for crude hedging, and as the number of refiners in China increases, banks have to both support their hedging needs and provide education for firms in order to understand how the hedging market works.
For more sophisticated firms, these transactions can become more complex, requiring BOCI to innovate. For example, when one of the largest crude oil importers in China asked the bank for support with an oil repurchase agreement, BOCI proposed and executed a highly sophisticated, bespoke transaction. The deal set the standard for the bank, which has taken part in a number of similar transactions.
“The repo transactions we conducted are quite different from those done by our industry peers,” says Raymond Lau, chief operating officer of BOCI Global Commodities. “They typically provide repo for cargos on oil tankers, but we have accepted inventories in Chinese onshore warehouses at our clients’ facilities. Based on a strong understanding of our clients’ operations, we are able to tailor-make more flexible financing solutions.”
However, this poses a particular challenge to many banks, which have limited experience in handling physical cargoes and the environmental, transportation and storage risks that entails.
“As we have a long-standing relationship with these clients and a strong commitment to serve them, we managed to structure these trades such that we transfer part of the operational risk into credit risk,” says Lau.
There is no physical movement of the oil, but there is a legal transfer of ownership, which would make the bank liable for operational risks. However, through the use of an insurance policy and total direct loss transfer, by way of the risk transfer terms as stipulated in a side letter, operational risk is limited to booking the repo transaction.
The bank also trades across the barrels in the over-the-counter swaps market to help clients in the price discovery process across crude, distillates, fuel oil, mogas and other light end-products, while also dealing in cross-product differentials such as gasoline/fuel and gas oil/fuel to support customer hedging requirements. Because of the large volumes that can be involved in these orders, they test the bank’s ability to handle large-scale trades and limit information leakage. To handle this workload requires dedicated personnel.
Being able to work both with domestic and international exchanges has been critical to BOCI because of the range of products and services it provides to clients.
“The ability to innovate and stay on top of new product developments across the domestic and global markets – and to work seamlessly between the two – will continue to drive the growth of our business,” says Arthur Fan, global head of commodities at BOCI.
Looking ahead, Fan sees a great deal of potential in a renminbi-denominated crude oil benchmark, which looks set to launch on the Shanghai International Energy Exchange sometime in the not too distant future.
“We have been working closely with the INE in Shanghai regarding the upcoming oil futures contract for quite a few years,” he says. “We will be in a good position to participate and structure solutions for our clients on this. Combining our deep understanding of the Chinese domestic market and our comprehensive international platform, we aim to bridge the gap, so as to provide foreign participants with better insight into the Chinese onshore market and vice versa. I believe this will be a key area not just for the energy sector, but for the commodities market as a whole.”
Only users who have a paid subscription or are part of a corporate subscription are able to print or copy content.
To access these options, along with all other subscription benefits, please contact info@risk.net or view our subscription options here: http://subscriptions.risk.net/subscribe
You are currently unable to print this content. Please contact info@risk.net to find out more.
You are currently unable to copy this content. Please contact info@risk.net to find out more.
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (point 2.4), printing is limited to a single copy.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@risk.net
Copyright Infopro Digital Limited. All rights reserved.
You may share this content using our article tools. As outlined in our terms and conditions, https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/ (clause 2.4), an Authorised User may only make one copy of the materials for their own personal use. You must also comply with the restrictions in clause 2.5.
If you would like to purchase additional rights please email info@risk.net
More on Awards
Trading systems: structured products/cross-asset – Murex
Murex won the Trading systems: structured products/cross-asset award at the 2025 Risk Markets Technology Awards for its MX.3 platform, praised for its flexibility and advanced analytics
Best vendor for system support and implementation: Murex
Murex has won the Best vendor for system support and implementation at the Risk Markets Technology Awards, recognised for its innovative MX.3 platform, exceptional client support and seamless implementation services
FRTB-IMA product of the year: Murex
Murex wins FRTB-IMA product of the year for its advanced, scalable MX.3 platform enabling seamless regulatory compliance
Pricing and analytics: equities – Finastra
Finastra’s Sophis platform wins the Risk Markets Technology Award for Pricing and analytics in equities, recognised for its robust capabilities in equities and derivatives trading
Best execution product of the year: Tradefeedr
Tradefeedr won Best execution product of the year for its API platform, which standardises and streamlines FX trading data, enabling better performance analysis and collaboration across financial institutions
Collateral management and optimisation product of the year: LSEG Post Trade
LSEG Post Trade wins Collateral management and optimisation product of the year for interconnected services that help mitigate counterparty risk and optimise capital usage
Clearing house of the year: LCH
Risk Awards 2025: LCH outshines rivals in its commitment to innovation and co-operation with clearing members
Driving innovation in risk management and technology
ActiveViam secured three major wins at the Risk Markets Technology Awards 2025 through its commitment to innovation in risk management and technology