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ECX reduces warehouse receipts expiration date

Fewer Days for Traders to Move Coffee at ECX

Twenty day expiration due to storage issues; weight, moisture rules adjusted as well

By Elleni Araya

May 5, 2013

The warehouse at Saris, with a capacity of carrying 300,000 quintals, is the largest coffee storing warehouse ECX has, it is also the nearest to the ECX trading floor.

The Ethiopia Commodities Exchange (ECX) is reducing the expiration date of warehouse receipts issued for coffee which will go down to 20 days from the previous 30 as of May 9, 2013.

This is one of four changes introduced by ECX and approved by its supervising body, the Ethiopian Commodity Exchange Authority (ECEA). Changes introduced include moisture adjustment, the amount that should be contained in a bag, and the cost of handling goods.

The receipts, which serve as legal titles and financial instruments, are issued by the ECX to traders once they put their commodities in an ECX warehouse.

The ECX introduced these changes following a series of studies it conducted during the current year. The Authority gave its blessing to the changes two weeks ago.

ECX's executives including Anteneh Assefa, CEO of the Exchange, Abenet Bekele, Chief Strategy Officer (CSO), and Shimeles Habtewold, Chief Compliance Officer (CCO) discussed the amendments with Exchange members on Tuesday, April 31, 2012.

Members who sell coffee must store it in ECX warehouses within the expiry date or face the daily penalty levied in the contract, which amounts to 3.5 pc of the current tradable value of the coffee they have stored in ECX warehouses.

The current tradable value of a warehoused commodity is calculated based on the closing price of the same grade of the commodity on the trading floor for the day.

It is not the first time that the deadline for warehouse receipts of coffee has been reduced. In 2008 when ECX came onto the scene, suppliers and intermediary members (who sell on behalf of others for commission) were given 90 days to make a transaction. However, as suppliers refrained from making a sale because they were looking for better returns, which inflated the price, this was slowly changed down to thirty. Other commodities sold through the exchange like sesame and haricot beans, have a 60-day deadline.

The current deadline change was made following an in-house study of transaction data from the past 18 days, according to Anteneh. The study revealed that 50pc of members storing coffee at ECX warehouses make a sale within eight days and 90 pc of members within 20 days.

"In most cases the leftover 10pc did not sell their goods because of special circumstances," he said.

Despite the fact that a vast majority of traders were able to move the coffee by that deadline, suppliers that Fortune talked to were not pleased by the change.

"It hurts us, especially when the markets are as low as they are now," an intermediary member of ECX, who had been trading on the floor since 2008, told Fortune.

"Even with the 30 day deadline, sometimes we are forced to settle for low prices, in order to avoid penalties," said this member, adding that he was forced to sell a feresula (17kgs) for 750Br because of it.

"It was 50 Br less than what I would have got had I held on to it for a few days longer," he said.

The primary purpose of the ECX warehouses is to facilitate trade and not storage, Anteneh countered.

"Storage space at warehouses is limited, and we must set the deadline in accordance with trends observed in the research," he told Fortune.

Currently nine of the 16 ECX warehouse sites store coffee. The warehouses at these sites have the capacity to store 1.4 million quintals at a time.

During a discussion on Tuesday with senior officials, coffee traders asked that the deadline be 20 business days because many suppliers complain that with weekends and public holidays a 20 day limit leaves them few days to conduct business.

However, as the previous thirty day deadline was also based on calendar days instead of working days there will not be any change, Anteneh said. The officials at the meeting told the members that in the future Saturday could become a business day.

The other change deals with moisture adjustment and the weight differences of the coffee that suppliers bring and buyers take from the warehouse. The suppliers are only allowed to bring coffee to the warehouse when the moisture is equal to or less than 11.5pc.

The moisture adjustment rate is different for sellers and buyers. Previously the ECX calculated a 0.0085pc daily weight loss for the supplier.

Now the ECX has introduced two flat rates. For the suppliers, the coffee is assumed to go through a reduction in weight of 0.137pc daily, whereas for buyers goes down by 0.0344pc. Every day coffee for sellers is reduced by one kilo out of 730 kilos while for the buyers it looses on kilo for ever 2,941kg.

After the coffee has been sold, it can remain in the warehouse for 10 days.

These adjustments are made despite a study finding that coffee loses 0.22pc of its total weight during storage, Abenet said.

Further adjustments will be made based on the weather conditions of ECX warehouse locations, he said.

The rates for handling goods at ECX warehouses has also been changed from 2.10 Br a bag for buyers and 2.70 Br for sellers to flat rate of 3.50 Br.

"The ECX subsidises the cost of handling goods which even the 3.50 Br does not cover," Anteneh told Fortune.

There was not a lot of objection raised during the meeting on this increase.

The fourth change in the amendment requires that a bag of washed coffee without parchment must be 85Kg, the same amount as for unwashed coffee. The previous contract only required a net weight of 60Kg in a bag for washed coffee, with or without parchment.

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