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COLUMN-Commodity traders face consolidation: Kemp

By John Kemp

LONDON, Dec 6 (Reuters) - Deutsche Bank's decision to quit trading in most commodity markets is another sign of the excess capacity across the commodity-trading sector and likely foreshadows further consolidation over the next two to three years.

Deutsche, rated one of the top five commodity banks globally, will cease trading in energy, agriculture, base metals, coal and iron ore, while retaining its precious metals business and popular index funds.

Deutsche is not the first to scale back. In 2012, UBS announced it would stop trading most commodities other than gold and index funds.

Earlier this year, JPMorgan Chase and Co announced it was putting its physical commodity businesses up for sale, following pressure from the U.S. Federal Reserve.

Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs are also exploring a sale for parts of their physical trading operations.

Other major banks such as Barclays and BNP Paribas have sharply reduced elements of their commodity trading and financing businesses in the last two years.

Headcount on the commodity desks of the 10 investment banks with the largest commodity businesses has fallen by a fifth since 2011, according to industry analysts at Coalition.

Revenues for the commodity banks are expected to be under $5 billion this year, down more than half from $12 billion at the end of the last decade, Coalition said in a recent report.

It is fashionable to blame regulations introduced following the 2008 financial crisis for making commodity trading uneconomic and causing banks to retreat.

In reality, the trading units had become unprofitable, as too many banks, trading houses and hedge funds were chasing too little business from investors and end-users.

The number of banks, merchants and hedge funds operating in commodity markets has continued to grow over the last three years, even as commodity prices have peaked and begun to fall, and investors have scaled back money allocated to the sector.

"The decision to refocus our commodities business is based on our identification of more attractive ways to deploy our capital and balance sheet resources," Colin Fan, co-head of Corporate Banking & Securities at Deutsche Bank, said in a statement on Thursday.

"This move responds to industry-wide regulatory change and will also reduce the complexity of our business."

SHRINKING PROFITS

Pressure on profits is visible across the sector.

Like commodity prices, the trading business has always been strongly cyclical.

The price of most commodities peaked between 2007 and 2011 and is now flat or falling. Traders inevitably insist their businesses are designed to make money in both rising and falling markets. It is much easier, however, to make money during a cyclical upswing.