Free Trial

About Trade Finance Magazine

Through close contact with those active in the sector, Trade Finance magazine is able to bring you critical news not found elsewhere. Market intelligence that will assist you with your business and in-depth independently-written feature articles provide potential leads and other resource information. Turn our news, knowledge and insight to your advantage with essential information and detail on the global trade, export and commodity finance markets - intelligence vital to exporters/importers, financiers, insurers, and other service providers.


With a subscription to Trade Finance magazine you can:

  • Plan your strategies or cooperative initiatives with reviews and analyses of current deals (in negotiation, in progress or signed).
  • Gain in-depth understanding of ECA activity in emerging markets through our regular export finance news pages.
  • Stay ahead in this complex market with round-ups of moves and developments, market updates and technological advances.
  • Know who is supporting exporters through reviews of export financing deals and export credit agency developments in regular market and regionally-driven features on structured trade and export finance.
  • Gain access to www.tradefinancemagazine.com allowing you to search back through the archives dating from April 1999.
  • Keep up to date with the latest industry news using our weekly e-news service or through our breaking news alerts.

 

Do more with Trade Finance:

   Set up your RSS feeds
 Follow Trade Finance Magazine on Twitter

For more information call our hotline on +44 (0) 20 7779 8999 or email us

Poll

Will Russia’s recent ban on grain exports result in a significant rise in private risk insurance claims from grain traders unable to fulfil their contracts?

Yes – there will be more claims. The government’s actions allow traders, with PRI cover, to make claims through contract frustration.
8%
No - the majority of Russia’s wheat production, some 70%-80%, is used for domestic consumption so the contracts represent only a small portion of the total wheat market, limiting the amount of potential claims.
23%
No - traders had a week’s notice before the ban allowing them to secure alternative supplies to fulfil contracts stated as optional origin.
23%
Maybe - but claims are likely to be limited to traders dealing in soft wheat whose contracts demand they source wheat only from Russia.
46%