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ECAs step up commodity trader support as supply security concerns rise

Export credit agencies are becoming more important financing partners for major commodity traders as governments seek to secure energy, metals and critical raw material flows.

Large traders including Trafigura, Mercuria, Gunvor, Vitol and Glencore have used ECA-backed facilities across several markets as geopolitical volatility increases the need for reliable liquidity.

The shift marks a change in the role of export credit agencies. Traditionally, ECAs focused on supporting domestic exporters and reducing lending risk for cross-border sales. They are now being used more directly to support supply security, strategic imports and commodity flows.

Commodity traders say the trend has accelerated since the energy market disruption that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. More recently, tensions in the Middle East have added pressure on financing needs, with higher prices and volatility increasing the amount of capital required to move the same volumes.

The development matters for commodity finance because ECAs are expanding into structures that go beyond conventional guarantees. Market participants say agencies are now participating in prepayments, project finance and revolving credit facilities.

That could make public-backed liquidity a more permanent part of commodity finance. For banks, it may reduce some risk in strategically important deals. For traders, it provides an additional funding source at a time when price swings, sanctions risk and supply disruption are making capital needs harder to predict.

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