BEIJING, June 1 (Xinhua) -- China's futures market
witnessed a sharp increase in trading volume in May, led by the active trading
of farm products, including sugar, soybean, corn, zinc.
Trading volume hit 5 trillion yuan (714 billion U.S.
dollars), representing an increase of 88 percent over the same period last year,
according to figures released here by the China Futures Association.
Market analysts attributed the increase to an
improving domestic market environment, as well as fluctuating domestic farm
product prices caused by surging grain prices in the world market and the snow
disaster in the country earlier this year.
At Shanghai Futures Exchange, where metals such as
gold, copper and zinc are mainly traded, the trade volume in May totaled 2
trillion yuan with 15.44 million in contracts, up 4.2 percent and 5.6 percent
respectively. The growth rate climbed 19 percent over that of the previous
month.
Zhengzhou Commodity Exchanges (ZCE) saw a trade
volume of 1.15 trillion yuan in May, an increase of 376 percent over the same
period last year.
Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE)'s trade volume
totaled 1.88 trillion yuan in May, up 280 percent year on year or down 24
percent over April.
In terms of market share, trade volume of SHEF, ZCE and DCE accounted for 18 percent, 36 percent and 46 percent of China's total in May, respectively.
Futures markets nationwide realized 490 million contracts in the first five months valued at 29.5 trillion yuan, up 167 percent and 163 percent over the same period last year, respectively.
China shares up 2.5% on index futures trading comment
BEIJING, May 28 (Xinhua) -- Shares performed strongly on Wednesday, gaining about 2.5 percent, as sentiment was buoyed by a regulator's comment that stock index futures were about ready to begin trade.
The news particularly benefited brokers and a range of non-financial companies that have holdings in futures-trading companies. Full story