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20 or 100 tonne contract

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    20 or 100 tonne contract

    Not sure how much this has been
    discussed but what does the community
    think of having 100 tonne contracts for
    wheat? Of course matches the US system
    but how will that effect the our
    fledgeling contract?

    Is 100 too big? Should it be 20? Would
    that spur more interest? I would think
    it would. 20 tonne contracts would allow
    more trades and certainly farmers in the
    trade.

    Could it be changed? Has that ship
    sailed? So many questions and concerns.
    Would love to hear from ya.

    #2
    Make it at least 40 tns, basicaly a truck load min dockage. 80 pearcent of all grains and oilseeds are delivered by semi load - keep it simple, imo

    Comment


      #3
      Canola and most everything else is 20.
      Don't think its about the size of the
      truck as 2 x 20 is 40 anyway, its about
      number of trades. Again, could be way
      wrong here.

      Comment


        #4
        I agree with furrow, I have been selling in
        increments of 40 MT since the '90's when the
        local elevators closed. That's a btrain semi load
        to anywhere. Two btrains fills a rail car,
        everybody wins.

        Comment


          #5
          With the size of the Canadian market and the desire for us to have a viable trading platform for canadian grains we want liquidity and volume is one way to start getting these contracts a volume level that will attain liquidity. My vote is for 20 for canadian grains. I've traded all sorts of various size contracts and never had anyone say its not big or small enough. The fact that a person wants to sell by the size of truck they own or the size of bin they have shouldn't be the deciding factor it should be the need for volume at these early days for these contracts. The success of Canola and it's "ease" of marketing is largely a result of the fact it is visible and has the volume to be viable for all players in that market.

          Comment


            #6
            WD9,

            Being that the US markets are in 5000bu contract sizes... 100T should be a reasonable size.

            I do not get why this is/should be an issue....

            Comment


              #7
              100 tonnes were chosen in the wheat contract in
              order to approximate (or at least get reasonably
              close to) the 5,000 bu US wheat contracts. The
              main thing we want is liquidity and there are "prop
              traders" (proprietary traders - large spex) who we
              anticipate will be trading the spread between ICE
              and MGEX and/or CBOT. What is important to
              them is "tick size" - the $ involved in one tick. On
              US wheat, one tick is $12.50. With 100 tonnes,
              ICE wheat is $10.00. To these guys, that's
              reasonable. They're not impressed with $2.00 per
              tick (on a 20 tonne contract).

              Another factor is execution cost - with 20 tonne
              contracts, their execution cost would be 5x what it
              will be with 100 tonne contracts. When you start
              trading size, this starts to matter.

              Other considerations were that - for the most part,
              Winnipeg contracts have traditionally traded in
              multiples of 5 lots (100 tonnes) anyway.

              Conventional wisdom also says the prop traders
              and like-minded commercials will bring more
              volume and liquidity to the market than those
              farmers who trade less than 100 tonnes at a time.
              (Many farmers will trade 100 tonnes or more).

              Also keep in mind that the new CWB (and
              possibly some grain companies) will be offering
              "futures first" contracts and I suspect they will
              allow less than 100 tonnes per contract.

              Comment

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