Credit `Tsunami' Swamps Trade as Banks Curtail Loans (Update1)

By Michael Janofsky, Mark Drajem and Alaric Nightingale

 Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Richard Burnett's lumber company had started
loading wood onto ships heading for China. More was en route to the
docks. It was all part of an order that would fill 100 40-foot cargo
containers.

Then Burnett got a call from his buyer at Shanghai VIVA Wood Products
Co. The deal was dead. He told Burnett, president of Cross Creek Sales
LLC in Augusta, Georgia, he couldn't get a letter of credit to
guarantee payment for at least six months.

``It was like a spigot got cut off,'' Burnett said, recounting the
transaction that fell apart in July. The inability of buyers in China
and Vietnam to get letters of credit has cost his company as much as
$4 million this year, a third of projected revenue, forcing him to lay
off 15 of 35 employees, he said.

Suppliers of oil, coal, grains and consumer products from Chicago to
Mumbai are losing sales as the credit crisis spreads beyond financial
institutions, and banks refuse financing or increase the fees for
buyers. Coupled with declining demand, the credit squeeze is
threatening international trade, one of the lone bright spots in the
global economy.

``It's like standing on a beach watching a tsunami, knowing that it's
coming,'' said Scott Stevenson, manager of the International Finance
Corp.'s Global Trade Finance Program. IFC is the World Bank's private
lending arm.

Emerging markets such as Brazil, Vietnam and South Africa are
particularly vulnerable because buyers have more trouble proving their
financial strength. The slowdown is also damaging the U.S., the
world's largest economy, where exports accounted for almost two-thirds
of the 2.1 percent growth in gross domestic product in the 12 months
through June, according to the U.S. Trade Representative's office.

Shipping Rates Fall

Another sign of trouble: The Baltic Dry Index, a measure of commodity
shipping costs that banks watch as an economic indicator, fell below
1,000 yesterday for the first time in six years, dropping it 89
percent for the year.

Global trade volumes may sink next year, their first decrease since
1982, according to Andrew Burns, a lead economist at the World Bank.
While there is still uncertainty over future prospects, trade may
contract by as much as 2 percent, after annual increases of 5 percent
to 10 percent over the past decade.

``We only see this kind of shock when we have outbreaks of war, or
maybe the oil shocks of the 1970s,'' said Kjetil Sjuve, a commodities
shipbroker at Lorentzen & Stemoco AS in Oslo. ``This lack of credit
was a shock to the entire economy. We were hit second after the
banks.''

Letters of Credit

Of the $13.6 trillion of goods traded worldwide, 90 percent rely on
letters of credit or related forms of financing and guarantees such as
trade credit insurance, according to the Geneva-based World Trade
Organization.

Letters of credit are centuries-old instruments that allow far-flung
partners to complete large transactions. An importing company gets its
bank to issue the letter, guaranteeing payment for a delivery. That
bank provides the letter to the exporter's bank, which then guarantees
payment to the exporting company.

The system breaks down when banks don't trust one another and are
unwilling to accept a letter of credit as proof that payment is
coming.

>From 2000 through last year, the use of letters of credit declined to
about 10 percent of global trade transactions, the IFC's Stevenson
said. Over the past six months, they began ``roaring back into
fashion'' as sellers sought to guarantee payments from buyers they no
longer trusted, he said. At the same time, liquidity problems caused
banks to increase charges.

Rates Rise

The risk premium for letters of credit in emerging market countries
such as China, Turkey, Pakistan and Argentina has doubled or tripled
recently, said Uwe Noll, director of country/FI sales at Deutsche Bank
AG.

``The whole global trade production line relies on letters of
credit,'' Matt Robinson, an analyst at Moody's Economy.com wrote in an
Oct. 23 report. ``No letters of credit, no transactions -- and no
transactions mean no international trade.''

The evidence is piling up in the world's ports.

An Iranian oil tanker able to carry enough crude oil to supply Ireland
for five days arrived at the Turkish port of Ceyhan on Oct. 6. Then
she waited eight days before the company that hired her was able to
secure a letter of credit that was acceptable to Iraq, the country
selling the cargo, according to two people involved in the loading and
unloading of the oil.

`Crisis Situation'

Mumbai-based Essar Shipping Ports & Logistics Ltd. couldn't buy
equipment used to handle bulk materials at ports when the Chinese
supplier wasn't able get a letter of credit from an Indian state-owned
bank accepted in China, said V. Ashok, Essar's executive director.

``This is absolutely a crisis situation here,'' Ashok said. ``If you
don't discount LCs, how will you do business? Business around the
world is done on LCs, not cash. It's all jammed.''

In Chicago, C1 Resources is holding up 1 million metric tons of cement
valued at as much as $150 million, because an African customer can't
secure a letter of credit, said Chief Operating Officer Rob Risner.
The order was placed Sept. 10 for shipment to Nigeria, Cameroon and
Angola and the customer is still seeking a line of credit, Risner
said.

Burnett, of Cross Creek, said the demise of his deals with Asian
buyers also reflects the weakness of the U.S. economy, including a
slowdown in construction that has reduced demand for the wood products
companies such as Shanghai VIVA make.

Liu Jian Jun, manager of Shanghai VIVA, said weak demand in the U.S.
and elsewhere killed the deal with Cross Creek, not access to credit.

Small Business Hurt

James Morrison, president of the Small Business Exporters Association
in Washington, polled 1,000 of his members this month on the impact
tight credit is having on their ability to trade. By a margin of six
to one, companies that had tried to get export financing recently said
they faced ``unusual difficulties.''

A few said their banks had told them the terms of existing credit
facilities had to be reworked and the companies would have to provide
more principal, Morrison said.

The same is true in Brazil. An Oct. 23 report from the country's
Confederacao Nacional das Industrias, which represents 27 industry
groups and 7,000 trade associations, found that Brazilian companies of
all size are losing access to credit.

``To make exports feasible, you need funding and this has virtually
dried up in the last weeks,'' said Flavio Castelo Branco, chief
economist for the group.

`More Cautious'

Policymakers are responding. Pascal Lamy, head of the WTO, has called
a meeting of trade officials for Nov. 12 in Geneva to discuss how to
get more credit to exporters in poor nations. The organization has
invited heads of the largest development banks as well as
representatives from Citigroup Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and other
commercial banks.

The World Bank has added $500 million to the $1 billion it was already
using to guarantee export financing. The U.S. Export- Import Bank, a
government-chartered entity that helps finance exports, is gearing up
to provide more guarantees, said Jeffrey Abramson, vice president for
trade finance.

Dominic Ng, chief executive officer of Pasadena, California- based
East-West Bancorp Inc., the biggest lender serving the Chinese
community in the U.S., said his bank this year has reduced the number
of letters of credit issued for the first time. It is providing about
10 percent fewer letters, after annual increases of 10 percent to 20
percent in the past decade.

``We've become more cautious,'' Ng said, blaming the retrenchment on a
decline in the number of credit-worthy customers. Bank bailouts funded
by the U.S. and other governments have begun to ease liquidity
problems.

``But we still have credit issues,'' he said. ``And they are going to
get worse, not better, because the economy is getting worse.''

To contact the reporters for this story: Michael Janofsky in Los
Angeles at [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Mark Drajem in Washington at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]; Alaric Nightingale in London at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Last Updated: October 28, 2008 20:30 EDT
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