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Concerns Raise over the Delay in Fixing the Global Metal Warehousing

<p>The mid 1990s saw a criminal investigation in the London Metal Exchange surrounding a certain Mr&period; 5 percent&comma; indicating his total shares in the global copper market&period; The investigations revealed the usual line of fraud in hoarding the supplies and artificially increasing the demand and the price&period; The investigations ensued only when Yasuo Harnanaka&comma; the lead trader of the Japanese Sumitomo Corp piled up &dollar;2&period;6 billion in unsanctioned losses putting the entire copper market in a pressure cooker situation&period; The LME  plunged into an immediate crisis which led to the inquiries&period; However&comma; there were no criminal charges in the UK&period; There was only a probe by Alan Whiting&comma; former treasury official in 1997 that overhauled the rulebooks of the biggest metal market in the world&period; There were soon new limitations on the positions of the traders&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Although there were important lessons from the incident&comma; yet apparently they have not been sufficient&period; Reviews of the Whiting report and other similar reports in the last 17 years show that much is left to do to prevent controversial transactions&period; Recently&comma; US manufacturers filed a lawsuit that asserted the LME rules to be inadequate in controlling rampant warehousing by banks and leading traders&period; This has been leading to increased prices over metal transactions&period; However&comma; the accused traders and the banks were quick to deny the allegations as baseless&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In the Whiting report&comma; there were strong concerns on the regulations of about 700 metal warehouses owned and operated by the LME across the world&period; The report indicated controversial relationships between the members of the LME and the warehouse companies and identified this as a major threat to a stable and transparent transaction system&period; The report states that the warehouses constantly encourage long-term storage by offering incentives and imposing hefty fees on the extraction of stocks&period; Also&comma; the warehouses have been gaining a notorious unprofessional reputation of delaying deliveries consistently without substantial reasons&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Presently&comma; the LME finds itself embroiled in a net of high profile accusations and lawsuits&period; The exchange itself was sold last year to the Hong Kong Stock exchange operator&comma; indicating that the authorities were trying to  wash off their hands from a complicated predicament&period; The LME is actually a defendant in the different lawsuits that accuse Goldman Sachs&comma; Glencore Xstrata&comma; and JP Morgan of manipulating the aluminum market and breaching anti-trust laws&period; The lawsuits directly accuse the traders and the banks to set up a collusion in stockpiling huge metal quantities in warehouses and delivering them at the minimum possible pace&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This strategy escalated the costs of soft drink cans to that of aircrafts&period; The Plaintiffs accuse the LME of devising rules that allowed them to ignore any call for change in the current system&period; The exchange however states that the rules were written through independent sources&period; These current lawsuits are also in line with an ongoing probe by the US Justice Department on metal warehousing&comma; and physical assets ownerships by the Wall Street banks&period; Market experts warn that without strict punitive measures against such top level disconnections can see the global metal market crashing&comma; leading to another major financial crisis&period;      <img class&equals;"alignright size-medium wp-image-174" alt&equals;"Finance 2" src&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;sjz68&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;2013&sol;11&sol;Finance-2-300x199&period;jpg" width&equals;"300" height&equals;"199" &sol;><&sol;p>&NewLine;

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