China’s commodity exchanges capable of cooling any futures trade frenzy
Friday May 13, 2016
Roller-coaster game is the best metaphor to describe what has happened to China’s steel, coking coal, coke, and iron ore futures in the past two weeks where prices are concerned. And of course, not surprisingly, the exchanges — as the watchdogs — have contributed to the price fluctuation since over April 21-May 10. The Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) and Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) both intervened a few times too during the past two weeks just to cool the trading frenzy in their respective rebar, hot-rolled coil and iron ore, coking coal and coke futures contracts, via the means of raising the daily price fluctuation caps, transaction fees, margins, and blacklisting those individuals that have been too frequently opening and closing positions on the daily basis, blocking them from trading for one month. Besides, SHFE also shortened the night trading hours of rebar and HRC to 2100-2300 Beijing time starting May 3 from the original 2100-0100. This was welcomed by a Shanghai trader, saying, “Finally I can get some sleep instead of staying up late into the midnight.” The bourses have taken these steps after future prices of all the above commodities hit daily caps on April 21 amid high trading volumes. This concerned China’s central government, as it will inflate physical values and thus make it more difficult for Beijing to tackle overcapacity in the steel sector. 
“[The] Chinese economy is full of complexity nowadays, and it is a hard task to stabilize the economy while going through restructuring, under such circumstances, [the] futures market is supposed to help and serve the economy,” DCE said in a statement Monday. However, the frenzy of speculative trading in iron ore, coking coal, and coke futures — mainly by individuals — will only multiply the risks and expose investors to greater vulnerability, it added, confirming the Chinese market sources’ understanding. A Beijing-based iron ore trader felt the impact keenly. “No one had expected physical iron ore price to have swung by $10/dry mt in a few days to hit $70/dmt in late April, as fundamentals, changing little, are unlikely to have caused such ...