Commodities exchange
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Cite This SourceA commodities exchange is an exchange where various commodities and derivatives products are traded. Most commodity markets across the world trade in agricultural products and other raw materials (like wheat, barley, sugar, maize, cotton, cocoa, coffee, milk products, pork bellies, oil, metals, etc.) and contracts based on them. These contracts can include spot prices, forwards, futures and options on futures. Other sophisticated products may include interest rates, environmental instruments, swaps, or ocean freight contracts. Steel contracts started to be traded for the first time on the London Metal Exchange in 2007.
Commodities trading
Commodities exchanges usually trade futures contracts on commodities, such as trading contracts to receive something, say corn, in a certain month. A farmer raising corn can sell a future contract on his corn, which will not be harvested for several months, and guarantee the price he will be paid when he delivers; a breakfast cereal producer buys the contract now and guarantees the price will not go up when it is delivered. This protects the farmer from price drops and the buyer from price rises.Speculators and investors also buy and sell the futures contracts to make a profit and provide liquidity to the system.
Commodities exchanges across the world
Main commodity exchanges worldwide:See also
- Commodity market
- Commodity trading in private electronic markets
- List of futures exchanges
- List of traded commodities
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Last updated on Wednesday March 12, 2008 at 23:05:42 PDT (GMT -0700)
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