NYMEX: Your Gateway to Commodity Futures | CME Group
What Is the New York Mercantile Exchange?
The New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) is the world's largest physical commodity futures exchange and is today part of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Group (CME Group), which is the world’s leading and most diverse derivatives marketplace. CME Group consists of four exchanges: Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT), NYMEX, and the Commodity Exchange, Inc. (COMEX). Each exchange lists wide range of futures products, commodities, and global benchmarks across major asset classes.
Understanding the New York Mercantile Exchange
An early version of NYMEX started in 1872 when a group of dairy merchants founded the Butter and Cheese Exchange of New York. In 1994, NYMEX merged with COMEX to become the largest physical commodity exchange at that time. By 2008, NYMEX was not able to commercially survive on its own in the wake of the global financial crisis and merged with the CME Group of Chicago. The merger brought a list of energy, precious metal, and agricultural products to the CME Group of exchanges.
Key Takeaways
- NYMEX is a commodities trading exchange that started in 1872 and was acquired by CME Group in 2008.
- The exchange lists futures and options on various metals, energy, and agricultural commodities.
- NYMEX was once an open-outcry market with trading pits, but like most exchanges today, it has become increasingly electronic.
Futures and options on energy, precious metals, and agricultural commodities are sometimes used to speculate, but are also tools for companies, farmers, and other industries that want to manage risk by hedging positions. The ease with which these instruments are traded on the exchanges is vital to creating protective positions (hedges) and gauging futures prices, making NYMEX an important part of the trading and hedging worlds.
Daily exchange volume of the CME Group is around 30 million contracts with NYMEX making up about 10% of that amount because of the physical commodities that are traded on that exchange. Much larger volumes are traded in interest rate futures, options, and forward contracts that trade on the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT).
NYMEX is regulated by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which is an independent agency of the United States government tasked with the promotion of competitive and efficient futures markets as well as the protection of investors against manipulation, abusive trade practices, and fraud.
Limitations of the NYMEX
NYMEX is an open-outcry trading platform, where human traders meet to haggle and agree on a market price for a commodity. Given that stock and commodity trading predates the invention of the telegraph, the telephone, or the computer by hundreds of years, it is fairly obvious that face-to-face human trading and trading pits were the standard way of doing business for a long time.
Today, however, open-outcry trading is on the decline, and the number of trading pits has dwindled. NYMEX has increasingly introduced electronic trading systems since 2006. In fact, given the cost benefits of the electronic systems and investor preference for fast order execution, a substantial percentage of the world's exchanges have already converted to electronic networks. At this point, the United States is more or less alone in maintaining open-outcry exchanges.
Futures trading
- New York Unemployment Benefits: COVID-19 Assistance & Application Guide
- New York HEAP Income Limits 2024: Eligibility & Requirements
- New York Unemployment Benefits: Calculate Your Potential Payout
- Understanding Tenants in Common Property Ownership in New York
- NYMEX Explained: A Comprehensive Guide to Commodity Futures
- New York Stock Exchange (NYSE): History, Facts & Overview
- New York Unemployment Benefits: Eligibility, Application & FAQs
- New York Stock Exchange (NYSE): History, Overview & Key Facts
- Understanding Guilder Shares: A Historical Look at Dutch Stock Trading in the US
-
Affordable NYC Living: Creative Ways to Reduce or Eliminate RentThe pickings are slim when it comes to budget rentals in New York City. According to rental listings site Zumper, a one-bedroom apartment could set you back upwards of $3,100 per month, as of the time...
-
NYBOT: Understanding the New York Board of Trade - Commodity Futures ExchangeFounded and established in 1870, the New York Board of Trade (NYBOT) is a physical commodity futures exchange. The NYBOT is located in New York City and trades futures and/or optionsOptions: Calls and...
