Agricultural commodity flows are among the most operationally complex in global trade — seasonal, origin-sensitive, quality-variable, and subject to export policy risk. We operate across the full supply chain, from farm-gate purchasing structures in major origin countries to delivery into major import markets.
Our engagement covers bulk grain and oilseed trade, edible oil flows, and selected soft commodity categories. We work with originators, cooperatives, exporters, crushers, importers, and food processors across multiple continents.
Trade finance, inspection coordination, and vessel chartering form part of the service wrapper for agricultural transactions.
Grain exporters, cooperatives, crushers, importers, state buying agencies, food processors, feed manufacturers.
Energy commodity trade is governed by pricing benchmarks, refinery configuration, and geopolitical flow dynamics. Our activity is focused on crude oil and refined products, with specific expertise in non-mainstream origin grades and out-of-pattern trade routes.
We engage with independent refiners, national oil companies, trading affiliates, and fuel distribution groups. Our strongest differentiator in energy is access to counterparties operating in markets where major trading houses are structurally absent or commercially uninterested.
Transaction structures typically involve letters of credit, tanker logistics coordination, and inspection at load and discharge port.
National oil companies, independent refiners, fuel importers, trading affiliates, industrial consumers, power utilities.
Metals and minerals trade has undergone structural shifts driven by energy transition demand, China's evolving import appetite, and the emergence of battery material supply chains. FAV Global's engagement spans traditional base metals through to critical minerals.
We work with mining producers, trading companies, smelters, processors, and industrial end-users. Our particular strength lies in structuring first-mover access for buyers seeking consistent supply from non-traditional origins.
Transactions are structured on FOB, CIF, or CFR terms, with pricing typically referenced to LME or equivalent benchmarks. Quality and assay verification is coordinated through SGS, Bureau Veritas, or equivalent inspection houses.
Mining producers, smelters, refiners, steel mills, industrial manufacturers, battery material processors, trading companies.
Our geographic coverage reflects where trade flows actually originate and terminate — not where commodity firms prefer to maintain offices.