 |
|
The Shanghai Futures Exchange (SFE), one of China's major futures trading venues, will start gold futures trading on Jan. 9, the exchange said on Saturday. (File Photo)
|
BEIJING, Dec. 29 (Xinhua) -- The Shanghai Futures
Exchange (SFE), one of China's major futures trading venues, will start gold
futures trading on Jan. 9, the exchange said on Saturday. But the contract size
will be larger than originally expected in order to discourage individual
investors.
The contract size will be set at 1,000 grams. In an
inquiry that the SFE distributed earlier this month, the contract size was
listed at 300 gm.
An official with the SFE said the contract size was
decided based on surveys. It is large enough to discourage those individual
investors who lacked the ability to take risks, while also being useful to
institutions.
"We started gold futures trading to provide channels
for gold producers and individual investors to hedge against price
fluctuations," said the official.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission said in a
statement on Friday that it had approved the gold futures.
The launch of gold futures would add to the hedging
options for gold producers against the fluctuating global market, analysts said.
Gold prices climbed almost 11 U.S. dollars an ounce,
boosted by strong oil prices, weak U.S. economic data and political concerns
following Thursday's assassination of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir
Bhutto.
An ounce of gold for February delivery added 10.90
U.S. dollars to settle at 842.70 U.S. dollars on the New York Mercantile
Exchange.
The SFE has said it would impose strict risk controls
on gold futures. It would set a minimum margin requirement of 7 percent of the
contract value and a daily price movement band, probably within the range of
plus or minus 5 percent of the previous settlement prices.
Gold was the second new futures product to be
introduced in China this year. The first was zinc, which launched trading in
March.
Last year, China produced a record 240 tons of gold,
up 7.15 percent year-on-year. In the first nine months of this year, it produced
191.456 tons of gold, up 13.1 percent from the same period last
year.