AnCaps
ANARCHO-CAPITALISTS
Bitch-Slapping Statists For Fun & Profit Based On The Non-Aggression Principle
 
HomePortalGalleryRegisterLog in

 

 CME snags a big prize as NYMEX deal approved

View previous topic View next topic Go down 
AuthorMessage
CovOps

CovOps

Female Location : Ether-Sphere
Job/hobbies : Irrationality Exterminator
Humor : Über Serious

CME snags a big prize as NYMEX deal approved Vide
PostSubject: CME snags a big prize as NYMEX deal approved   CME snags a big prize as NYMEX deal approved Icon_minitimeMon Aug 18, 2008 10:11 pm

NEW YORK/CHICAGO, Aug 18 (Reuters) - CME Group Inc's stranglehold on the U.S. futures market grew tighter on Monday with the approval of its $7.7 billion purchase of energy and metals trading market NYMEX Holdings Inc.
The Chicago-based company will now control some 98 percent of the trading in U.S. futures and options on futures, and many analysts expect its next target will be overseas.
CME has said the NYMEX transaction will close on Friday.
The deal, announced in January, was contentious among some members at the New York Mercantile Exchange, who complained it undervalued NYMEX at a time when energy derivatives trading volume has been exploding.
Those members threatened to scuttle the bid, even as late as last week. In the end, intense lobbying and a sweetened payout from CME secured 650 member votes in favor, or about 80 percent, above the 75 percent threshold it needed.
"I think '75 percent plus one vote' is a great victory. The rest is irrelevant. The CME was able to get a super majority as they presented a strong proposition," said Diego Perfumo, an analyst at Equity Research Desk.
The NYMEX purchase comes just 13 months after CME swallowed the Chicago Board of Trade in July 2007, which at that point was the second-largest U.S. futures exchange.
It will end a short run for NYMEX as an independent, publicly traded exchange. The New York mart staged a long-awaited initial public offering in late 2006.
"CME wants this so badly because the futures market is ... one of the few monopolies left in the world," said Brad Hintz, an analyst at Sanford Bernstein. "And it's a monopoly because they have their own clearing operation."
Unlike equities and equity options, futures contracts are not "fungible," meaning positions established at one exchange can not be offset at a competing exchange.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/feedarticle/7735187
Back to top Go down
 

CME snags a big prize as NYMEX deal approved

View previous topic View next topic Back to top 
Page 1 of 1

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
 :: Anarcho-Capitalist Categorical Imperatives :: AnCaps' Laissez-faire Free Trade Zone-