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Praveen Gurwani
MCX overtakes NCDEX in turnover
MCX has overtaken NCDEX to become India`s largest commodity exchange, reports Economic Times.
The turnover on MCX has crossed a record Rs 100 lakh crore.
NCDEX, still the country`s premier exchange for food and fibre crops, dropped to second place after the farm futures were gagged by the government with position limits and high margins.
Energy, metals and bullion traders put Rs 9.99 lakh crore in the MCX trading ring in six months while punters in cereals, spices, fibre and guar managed to trade in contracts worth just Rs 5.45 lakh crore on the NCDEX.
The daily volume at NCDEX has slipped to sub Rs 3,000 crore levels in the last few days from the peak volume of Rs 8,000 crore in March this year.
From a monthly turnover of Rs 1.5 lakh crore in May, the volume on NCDEX has shrunk to Rs 94,125 crore by October.
In contrast, the turnover on MCX is now touching Rs 9,000 crore daily on the back of a boom in bullion, energy and metals.
Between May-Oct. 2006, a huge 92.6% of MCX`s turnover came from high-value energy, metals and bullion. Farm produce provided the remaining turnover.
On NCDEX, 82% of the turnover came from food and fibre crops. Bullion trading accounted for the rest.
Interestingly, though both the exchanges are clearly the leaders in different product segments in the Indian commodity market, the mix is constantly changing. For instance, in May, bullion provided 81% of MCX turnover. By October, this had dropped to 69%.
Even so, the share of food and fibre crops in NCDEX`s total turnover has increased as the base has shrunk. The share of trading in farm commodities in the total turnover has increased from 79% in May to 85% in October.
According to NCDEX officials, the bar on trading limits, the exceptionally high margins on agricultural contracts and ambiguity on stock limits under the essential commodities act have all contributed towards a distinct slowdown in the farm futures.
:tea:
MCX has overtaken NCDEX to become India`s largest commodity exchange, reports Economic Times.
The turnover on MCX has crossed a record Rs 100 lakh crore.
NCDEX, still the country`s premier exchange for food and fibre crops, dropped to second place after the farm futures were gagged by the government with position limits and high margins.
Energy, metals and bullion traders put Rs 9.99 lakh crore in the MCX trading ring in six months while punters in cereals, spices, fibre and guar managed to trade in contracts worth just Rs 5.45 lakh crore on the NCDEX.
The daily volume at NCDEX has slipped to sub Rs 3,000 crore levels in the last few days from the peak volume of Rs 8,000 crore in March this year.
From a monthly turnover of Rs 1.5 lakh crore in May, the volume on NCDEX has shrunk to Rs 94,125 crore by October.
In contrast, the turnover on MCX is now touching Rs 9,000 crore daily on the back of a boom in bullion, energy and metals.
Between May-Oct. 2006, a huge 92.6% of MCX`s turnover came from high-value energy, metals and bullion. Farm produce provided the remaining turnover.
On NCDEX, 82% of the turnover came from food and fibre crops. Bullion trading accounted for the rest.
Interestingly, though both the exchanges are clearly the leaders in different product segments in the Indian commodity market, the mix is constantly changing. For instance, in May, bullion provided 81% of MCX turnover. By October, this had dropped to 69%.
Even so, the share of food and fibre crops in NCDEX`s total turnover has increased as the base has shrunk. The share of trading in farm commodities in the total turnover has increased from 79% in May to 85% in October.
According to NCDEX officials, the bar on trading limits, the exceptionally high margins on agricultural contracts and ambiguity on stock limits under the essential commodities act have all contributed towards a distinct slowdown in the farm futures.
:tea: