LONDON: New carbon commodities are
government-guaranteed in the climate change fight, but are still too complex and
immature to provide a haven for investors fleeing financial markets'
rout.
Cap and trade schemes place a limit on industry emissions of
heat-trapping gases like carbon dioxide, introducing a growing global trade in
carbon permits worth $64bn last year.
Those limits are legally
binding, and so underpin long-term demand for these new commodities and inject
price certainty which looks attractive during a global stocks
sell-off.
But the market's relative novelty and complex regulatory
framework are deterring a wave of investment for now.
"The market is
uncorrelated with equities. That may make it a safe haven, but people are not
rushing into it because the technical barrier is too high," said Frederic
Brodach, portfolio management director of Dexia Carbon Fund
Managers.
The European Union's emissions trading scheme launched in
2005 is the hub of a global carbon market which also includes carbon offsets
traded between rich and poor countries.
"The carbon market is just as
risky as the turmoil going on in equities. It's new, people don't fully
understand it, and there's a lot of political risk," said Trevor Sikorski,
carbon analyst at Barclays Capital.
Political risks include
uncertainty over carbon caps after 2012, under a new global treaty slated for
agreement next year, but now bogged down in squabbles over cost, responsibility
for global warming and a US election.
In addition, the new market is
over-elaborate or even obtuse to some, and has spawned its own lexicon of jargon
and acronyms.
"We have to go through a lot of effort to explain the
regulatory framework and technicalities to experienced bankers," Brodach
said.
Carbon emissions permits including EU allowances (EUAs) and
Kyoto-based certified emissions reductions (CERs) have been hit by the general
markets slide, showing some link with equities.
That is because a
global slowdown would cut industrial output, and thereby carbon emissions,
hitting EUA, CER demand.
EUAs have tracked the MSCI index of global
equities over the past month with a correlation of 0.98, near a perfect score of
1. CERs have shown far less stocks correlation in the past four weeks, scoring
0.56.
But other factors also impact carbon demand, for example a cold
winter would drive up emissions, and no amount of EU recession is expected to
wipe out EUA demand.
That leads many analysts to expect the present
EUA-equities link to be short-lived, returning to the 0.005 correlation shown
over the past 12 months.
"What ultimately supports the EUA and CER
market is compliance buying," said Christian Baum, at the derivatives exchange,
Eurex.
However, the market is too small at present to absorb fleeing
capital and if anything may become less liquid, albeit briefly, after the
collapse of Lehman Brothers and the closure of Swiss investment bank UBS'
commodities business.
But some commentators are bullish about the
market's potential in the long term.
"In a couple of months' time, if
the market has stabilized, I'm sure you will find more people interested in
getting back into carbon products," said Shane Spurway, head of carbon banking
at Fortis Global Markets Asia.
"Carbon is a commodity of the future.
You have to invest in something and this commodity's value is expected to have a
longer term increase," said Andrei Marcu, senior emissions trading adviser to
law firm Bennett Jones.