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Dalian Commodity Exchange plans to introduce coke futures this year and is studying plans for coking coal contracts as consumption for the raw materials rises in China, the world's biggest steelmaker.
"Due to a combination of factors, the price of coke and coking coal this year fluctuated a lot," Liu Xingqiang, the director of the bourse, China's largest derivatives market, said at a conference today. The industry's need for a risk transfer is very strong.
"It gives participants an opportunity to hedge some of their purchases and protect the downside." Andrew Driscoll, head of resources research at CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets, said by telephone. "A lot of the long term contracts are fixed in volumes but not prices, so futures will provide the industry with ways to hedge their positions."
Prices of coking coal traded in Asia rose to $225 a ton for the July quarter, up from $200 in the previous quarter, and compared with annual prices of $129 in 2009, according to Deutsche Bank AG. Prices could fall in the fourth quarter and into the first half of 2011 as global steel demand could "decelerate and potentially contract," the bank said in a June 30 report.
Trading volume
Futures trading in China, the third-largest economy, jumped 47 percent in the first half from a year ago, according to data compiled by the Futures Industry Association.
CME Group Inc, the world's largest futures exchange, predicts "great growth" in Asian derivatives as the economy grows. Dalian Commodity Exchange may introduce energy, coking coal and live-hog futures contracts to spur trading volume, Liu said in October last year.
Still, trading volume on the futures contracts may take a while to pick up, according to Driscoll.
"A lot of producers and consumers have been dealing directly with each other for a number of years. They're set in their ways of doing business," said Driscoll.