[Herald Interview] ‘Battery expansion to prompt strong cobalt, lithium trading’
Korea is likely to see more activity in the metal derivative market amid the growth of battery metals trading, said a CME Group executive in charge of handling the firm’s global metals business.
Jin Hennig, managing director and global head of metal products at CME Group, a leading financial derivatives exchange, said Korea can play a critical role in both metal trading and transactions as the overall market is growing at a fast pace.
CME Group, as a derivative marketplace, offers futures and options of commodities and finance, ranging from agriculture and metals to interest rates, allowing investors to hedge price risks.
“Korea has been one of the fastest-growing markets for (CME Group's) metals business in the past three to five years,” Hennig said in an interview with The Korea Herald in central Seoul on Friday.
Born and raised in Seoul, Hennig moved to the US when she was 16, and has been with CME Group since 2011. She is a member of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission's Energy & Environmental Advisory Committee, where she advises on the role of metals in the transition to clean energy.
According to Hennig, Korea has been the largest market in the Asia-Pacific region for CME Group in terms of market volume.
While gold has been traditionally the main market of interest in Korea as a safe-haven investment tool, the trend is changing as battery-related metals, such as cobalt and lithium, are receiving attention as the electric vehicle market expands.
In response to the larger transactions in metals trading, the need for derivative instruments related to the market comes as investors need a tool to protect against volatile price swings.
“We have been seeing great developments around battery metals,” Hennig said. “Metals are in a very bright spot because we need to build infrastructure to accommodate (them) as the energy transition happens. Electricity itself is not an issue, (the issue) is more (the storage) of electricity. The answer to that is batteries.”
“Because of the (US') Inflation Reduction Act, the (ESG drive) and market fragmentation, a lot of these markets are going to become more regionalized,” she said, explaining why a more diverse portfolio is needed now more than ever to hedge risks.
However, Hennig judges that the prices of metals, including cobalt, lithium and copper, have not yet reflected their full values as slower Chinese demand due to China's slowing economy has chilled the market.
With more than 20 years of experience in the metal trading business, Hennig believes trading in metal futures and options can be a stable tool to hedge risks during a time of high volatility.
“Sixty percent of our time is focused on the current liquid set of products and making sure that they are doing well. But 40 percent of our time gets spent exploring a new market and creating a hedging tool for the marketplace,” Hennig said.
“Our job is to make sure that we are staying ahead of the curve to find a contract or needs in the marketplace for the risk management tool," she said.
(责任编辑:패션)
- Daily Sports Hankook hopes to help stengthen Korea
- Google offers data residency for Korean corporate clients
- Food trade agency launches global low
- National Changgeuk Company's endeavor to foster pansori composers continues
- S. Korea's heavyweights like ex
- Stray Kids to perform at 2023 Billboard Music Awards
- [Herald Interview] ‘Daily Dose of Sunshine’ director, actor say drama consoled them
- Animal shelter busted for killing and burying hundreds of pets
- Violinist Yoo Da
- South Korea's Yoon will warn APEC leaders about the risks of a Russia
- [Today’s K
- BNK Busan Bank to pilot English
- 'Do not open plane doors' warning mandated for planes in flight
- US approves possible sale of SM
- Hyundai’s ‘Uni Wheel’ system gives more room for different car designs
- Seoul shares close higher as US inflation softens
- Finance minister calls for reenactment of corporate restructuring act
- Korean chip giant chiefs to travel to Netherlands with president
- Trilateral cooperation unaffected by US election outcomes: Goldberg
- Bill pushed to let South Korea list Hamas as foreign terrorist before UN
- S. Korea, Thailand to work to resolve entry denial claims views+
- From horror to romance, November is new battlefield for local films views+
- [Herald Review] Music Festival Pohang stands strong without conductor or chairs views+
- Samsung family members selling W2.6 trillion worth of shares to cover inheritance taxes views+
- SK Ecoplant to supply advanced fuel cells to Irish data center views+
- Samsung family to sell stakes worth W2.6tr to pay tax views+
- Without light, Lightwalk will not be architecture: Dominique Perrault views+
- World Cup in Saudi Arabia sparks human rights protest views+
- Yoon vows to move up completion of GTX commuter rail networks views+
- Over 90 pct of cattle vaccinated against lumpy skin disease views+