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ICE anyone?

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    ICE anyone?

    OK Whats the sentiment out there on the new ICE contracts?
    Odds on survival?
    No one's using them yet.
    We desperately need the barley to work. Do we need a durum? HRS?
    I really hope they succeed, but I'm not confident at this point.

    #2
    How do you get liquidity, when no one wants to trade
    in a market until it has some.

    What are some ways to get liquidity, perhaps eliminate
    the commission fees for the first year.

    Perhaps if they made it easier to make delivery on a
    contract it might get farmers trading. I am not
    really sure what the answer is but there needs to be
    something done to get a transparent market for barley.

    Comment


      #3
      Would there ever be enough volume in barley and durum to make it work.

      Comment


        #4
        I would really like to see these contracts work, but I think they tried to start them a little too early. I think that timing would have been better mid summer. I realize that they might miss some future hedging, but I think they would have more volume when people see what is in the field and the CWB is totally done their contracts. I too would really like to see barley work,I used to use Canola too.

        Comment


          #5
          I really like the contracts, and I really want them to work, because I think it will be much easier to discern basis signals against a local contract than against Mpls or Chicago.

          If you agree, tell your local grain buyers to feed the message up the chain that you'd like to sell some new-crop spring/durum/barley on a basis contract against the ICE contract.

          Comment


            #6
            The thing is, these contracts are reflecting the
            market activity in new crop. Once we see
            increased cash market activity in new crop
            positions, we should see more volume in the
            futures. Remember when we thought we had an
            open barley market in 2007? Close to a million
            tonnes of feed barley was sold to the Saudis and
            the barley futures contracts rocked - went from
            near nothing in volumes to sizeable trade.

            What we need is a market event. That might be
            harvest pressure.

            Comment


              #7
              As for increased farmer participation if delivery
              was possible - I can't think of a faster way to kill a
              contract.

              We had "farmer delivery" on a previous version of
              western barley futures. It was basically used as a
              cash contract. Farmers would sell the futures with
              the intent on delivering. Problem was, the guy
              that bought the futures as a hedge couldn't get out
              by selling the futures - because the farmers who
              sold the futures didn't want to buy them in - they
              wanted to deliver.

              True hedgers quickly realized that the contract
              could not be used as an effective hedge, sucking
              the liquidity out of the market.

              There are better ways to discipline a futures
              market. We need to get everyone thinking about
              futures as hedges and cash contacts as
              deliverables.

              Something to watch for -- once wheat is open,
              everything you grow will be a cash crop. Watch
              for tight basis levels on everything that has a
              basis. If we do this right, you won't want to deliver.

              (Cash canola at $10 over. Do you still want to
              deliver against futures?)

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