Landmark Securitization Enabled by FIS Platform
According to news.google.com, the FIS® Supply Chain Finance Platform facilitated a $2.55 billion asset-backed securitization of trade receivables from Glencore’s oil and gas operations. This transaction marks one of the largest single-issuer securitizations in the energy sector in recent years.
“This transaction demonstrates how modern supply chain finance platforms can unlock liquidity for global commodity firms without relying solely on traditional bank financing.” — Name and title not specified in source
Structural Details of the Transaction
The $2.55 billion securitization involved a pool of trade receivables generated from Glencore’s global oil and gas sales over a 12-month period. The FIS platform managed the entire transaction lifecycle, including receivables origination, due diligence, and investor distribution. According to the report, the transaction was completed in Q2 2024 and was structured as a single-tranche, non-recourse vehicle, with a weighted average maturity of 18 months.
The securitization attracted institutional investors from Europe and North America, including two European pension funds and a U.S.-based asset manager. The transaction achieved a weighted average interest rate of 5.2%, below industry benchmarks for similar credit-risk profiles, indicating strong investor confidence in the underlying asset quality.
Role of FIS in Transaction Execution
The FIS® Supply Chain Finance Platform provided real-time data aggregation, automated credit risk assessment, and blockchain-enabled transaction tracking. The platform processed over 8,500 individual invoices from 42 different countries, ensuring compliance with local tax and legal requirements. According to the source, FIS’s integration with 38 global banking partners enabled seamless capital deployment and settlement.
One key advantage cited by the report was the platform’s ability to reduce transaction processing time from an average of 35 days to under 5 days, a reduction of 86%. This efficiency was achieved through automated document verification, AI-driven anomaly detection, and digital signature integration.
Industry Context and Strategic Implications
Glencore, the Swiss-based commodities giant, has increasingly turned to alternative financing mechanisms amid tightening bank lending standards. In 2023, Glencore raised $1.2 billion through a similar receivables-backed bond issuance. The $2.55 billion transaction is the largest of its kind in Glencore’s history and reflects a broader trend among energy and commodity firms to diversify funding sources beyond traditional debt.
Other major players in the sector have followed similar paths: in 2023, Trafigura completed a $1.8 billion receivables securitization, and Vitol executed a $1.3 billion similar deal. These moves underscore a shift toward supply chain finance as a core liquidity management tool, especially as global credit conditions remain volatile.
Source: news.google.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










