Don't Skirt These E-MiNY Futures Contracts
Electronic mini contracts, or fractional versions of bigger contracts that trade on an exchange, have been among the most successful futures contracts in derivatives history, gaining rapidly in terms of acceptance and volume.
MiNYs
The New York Mercantile Exchange is next in line to launch mini-sized futures contracts. This Monday, June 17, the Nymex is slated to begin trading two new electronic products. The contracts are called light sweet crude oil e-miNY and natural gas e-miNY energy futures. Nymex had teamed with the CME on this product launch. Contracts will trade on the CME's Globex electronic trading platform, and the trades will still clear through Nymex. Like all minis, the e-miNY energy futures are smaller versions of bigger contracts. Both crude oil and natural gas e-miNYs will be 40% of the size of the contracts that trade in the pits on the floor of the Nymex. Hence, the size ratio is 2.5 e-miNYs to one standard-sized contract. Globex trading will be virtually around the clock -- 22 hours a day -- Sunday evening through Thursday, Eastern Standard Time. For the exact contract specifications, visit the Web sites for the Nymex or the CME. The allocation of up to 60 e-miNY floor trading rights will create arbitrage opportunities for Nymex members that will keep the pricing of the e-miNYs in line with the standard-sized contracts. The most exciting aspect about the new energy contracts is the potential for rapid order execution and confirmations. Clicking a buy or sell button and receiving an electronic confirmation within seconds is, of course, a lot faster than dialing a futures broker, speaking your order, having it repeated back to you and then waiting for a return call to get your order-fill confirmation, all of which is the standard process in most New York futures markets. High volume and tight spreads will ultimately determine the success of the e-miNY energy futures. But if the E-mini S&Ps traded on Globex are an indication, the new Nymex products could rapidly gain in popularity and make trading energy futures accessible to a broader range of traders.Trading Setups
It's not the most popular trading idea with everyone fretting about a weakening dollar. But the most heavily weighted currency on the dollar index -- the euro -- appears to be having difficulty rising above resistance. The September euro FX (ECU2:CME) has been hammered every time it's approached the .9450 area. Looking at the hourly chart, the ECU2 has failed to break above .9445 on four tries. If the contract fails to break out above .9445 on its fourth try, look for a downside correction to .9345.- Loading Comments...
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