China's night-owl retail investors leverage up to
dominate oil futures trade
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[May 14, 2018]
By Meng Meng and Josephine Mason
BEIJING (Reuters) - As 9 pm approaches
every weekday night in China, a small army of individual investors from
around the country log onto trading apps on their mobile phones and
laptops.
Wall Street may be about to open but these night owls are interested in
trading something much closer to home – the new Shanghai crude oil
futures contracts <0#ISC:> that were launched in late March.
Armed with risky loans from online firms or digging into their own
savings, they threaten to play an outsized role in the new market, which
has got off to a roaring start.
It is not for the fainthearted – one contract of 1,000 barrels costs
about 476,000 yuan ($75,160) and traders are required to place a deposit
– as much as 500,000 yuan – before they are allowed to trade.
On average, volume between 9 pm and midnight accounts for almost 60
percent of daily turnover, equivalent to about 22 million barrels of oil
worth more than 10 billion yuan.
And executives of online lending platforms, managers at major
brokerages, and traders interviewed by Reuters all said that most of the
orders in that period come from retail investors – and a lot of it
involves borrowed money.
Their dominance is a reflection of the interest among China's burgeoning
middle class for investments in the country's vast commodities market –
many of the crude oil traders also dabble in other commodities such as
iron ore and steel. This is especially the case after the authorities in
recent years succeeded in damping down speculative activity in stocks
and in real estate.
It is also a sign of the kind of mania that is high-risk not only for
the individual investors – who can quickly lose a lot of money borrowed
on margin – but also for the long-term prospects of China's oil futures
market.
The retail investors can exaggerate price swings – they tend to close
out positions every day, for example, to avoid holding costs - and the
market could lose liquidity quickly if a sell-off prompts a sudden
outflow of their money.
Liquidity, measured by open interest, hit 15,000 lots, equivalent to 15
million barrels, last Thursday, a record and almost double levels at the
start of May after Washington withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal and
renewed sanctions on the oil exporter. That does suggest a pick up in
interest from institutional investors in recent days.
But uncertainty about the role of retail players could in the longer run
deter foreign institutional investors, potentially undermining China's
attempts to become a major force in oil trading, which so far has been
seen largely as a success.
NIGHT SESSION PREFERRED
The market is also open for two short sessions between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.
but the retail crowd prefers the night time because many of them have
day jobs and because they can also trade the Shanghai contracts
alongside the established benchmarks for crude oil futures, London's
Brent <0#LCO:> and WTI in the United States <0#CL:>.
The Shanghai market closes at 2.30 a.m but volume drops off after
midnight as the part-time traders head off to bed.
"The crude markets tend to have more volatility at night, providing an
opportunity for us to trade," said Lv Peng, a 35-year-old investor based
in Zhengzhou, a second-tier city in central Henan province. "Domestic
retail investors often find cues for trading from international oil
prices."
Peng, a data analyst at a hedge fund, says he has on average been doing
between 8 and 15 trades each week - and has been up most nights until 1
a.m. since the launch on March 26.
He uses his own money. But that is not the case with a lot of the other
night traders.
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A company logo of Shanghai Futures Exchange is displayed at a booth
during LME Week Asia in Hong Kong, China June 14, 2016.
REUTERS/Bobby Yip/File Photo
For example, a bank employee in Nanjing in southern Jiangsu province who would
only provide his surname, Liu, said he piled on trades in the nascent market
with money borrowed from online financing platforms.
But Liu, who is in his mid-40s, lost 1 million yuan ($157,900) in the first two
weeks after his bets that prices would rally went against him. Instead prices
fell 11 percent.
He said he concluded that "retail investors are not able to make money in the
crude futures market", paid back his loans and quit the market feeling burned
out.
LENDERS SAY PLAY CRUCIAL ROLE
The Shanghai Futures Exchange said in an emailed statement that investors should
not use grey-market loans which have been banned by the government to trade
their products and they should be aware of the risks of doing so.
Market regulator China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) did not respond
to a request for comment.
"Small investors have made the crude futures trading market more active," said
Xu Wei, head of derivatives trading at software developer Fuxing Online Software
Co, which has around 4,000 retail investors using its product to trade oil
futures.
"At the same time, they are less experienced in the market and could easily lose
all they have."
Still, lenders say that if they weren't providing margin financing the contract
wouldn’t have had as successful a start.
"We provided almost two thirds of total volume contributed by retail investors.
Imagine what would have happened to the market if we pulled out," said an
official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, at a lender called FindOil.
His clients traded a total of 20,000 to 30,000 barrels of crude each night, he
said. That equates to 30 lots each. But with investors borrowing ten times the
money they're putting down, there is a real danger that some will lose their
shirts.
With that kind of leverage, a small move in oil crude futures could be very
costly for an investor if they were on the wrong side, said a client manager at
a medium-sized broker in central Henan province.
Xiamen-based Gold and Forex Management Co is one of many firms advertising
online as an asset management firm offering loans. Sources at loan companies say
interest rates can be as high as 1 percent a day.
The company has more than 100 retail customers who needed help paying the
deposit. Their combined deposit reached as high as 200 million yuan at one
point, a company source said.
Still, there is one person who won't be embarking on any more night-time trading
adventures anytime soon. That's Liu - the Nanjing banker.
He said he can handle the financial losses and his wife, though angry, did not
blame him. From now on though, he's going to invest in "less exciting" treasury
bonds and is sticking to doing it during daylight hours.
(Reporting by Meng Meng and Josephine Mason; Editing by Martin Howell)
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