Commodities Trader Gunvor Said to Exit Gold Trading After a Year
Dec. 12 (Bloomberg) — Gunvor Group Ltd. is giving up trading physical precious metals less than a year after the commodity house started a business dedicated to buying and selling gold.
At least two traders are leaving the company in Geneva and Singapore, according to people with knowledge of the matter, declining to be identified as the decision isn’t public. Seth Pietras, the firm’s spokesman in the Swiss city, declined to comment by phone and e-mail today.
Gunvor, the world’s fifth-largest oil trader, is one of the few major commodity firms that handles precious metals. The move into gold was part of an expansion into non-oil businesses that now include iron ore, industrial metals and natural gas. Gold trading was the done by a handful of people in Singapore and Geneva.
Among the departures are Francois Beuzelin, hired in 2012 as head of metals in Geneva, and Cedric Chanu, who started in Singapore in January as a precious-metals trader, the people said. Chanu declined to comment by phone and Beuzelin didn’t answer calls to his office nor an e-mail sent via his LinkedIn account.
Gunvor executives decided to abandon the precious metals trading business partly because of difficulties in finding steady supplies of gold, where the origin could be well documented, one of the people said. Gunvor’s announcement earlier this year that it would begin physically trading precious metals was unusual as neither Glencore Plc, the biggest metals trader, nor Trafigura Beheer BV, the second-largest, trade physical gold.
Base Metals
Gunvor continues to trade base metals including copper and aluminum as well as bulk commodities such as coal and iron ore.
Founded by Swedish national Torbjorn Tornqvist and Gennady Timchenko, sanctioned by the U.S. in March because of close ties to Vladimir Putin, Gunvor has expanded into other commodities and in Asia to diversify beyond its roots trading Russian crude oil, which now accounts for less than four percent of the firm’s trading volume.
Timchenko sold his 44 percent interest in the company to Tornqvist the day before he was sanctioned and the U.S. Treasury Department said Putin has investments in Gunvor and may have access to Gunvor’s funds. The company has strongly denied any connections to Putin and has provided U.S. officials with documentation regarding its shareholders and ownership structure.
Gunvor’s exit from physical precious metals followed Deutsche Bank AG, which announced its departure last month.
Gold prices have slumped 36 percent from a record reached in September 2011 as the U.S. economy improved, raising investors’ expectations of rising interest rate that dampened demand for non-yielding assets like bullion.
To contact the reporters on this story: Chanyaporn Chanjaroen in Singapore at cchanjaroen@bloomberg.net; Andy Hoffman in Geneva at ahoffman31@bloomberg.net To contact the editors responsible for this story: Will Kennedy at wkennedy3@bloomberg.net Randall Hackley