China commodity derivatives market is growing and opening up fast

Discussion in 'Commodity Futures' started by optquant, Nov 8, 2021.

  1. optquant

    optquant

    1. Development of China’s Commodity Futures Market

    Since 2010, the Chinese futures market had fast expanded with the launch of financial futures and Exchange-traded options. The derivatives market has entered a stage of comprehensive development from commodity futures to financial futures, from futures to options, from exchange-listed to OTC, and from domestic-investors-only to liberalized foreign investor trading.

    Currently, China’s domestically listed futures and options cover 7 categories of finance, industrial metals, precious metals, chemicals, energy, black series and agricultural products, with a total of 91 varieties, including 64 commodity futures and 20 commodity futures options.

    for more data and details, please read A Brief Introduction to the Status of China’s Commodity Futures Market | by MARKET BRIDGE CONSULTING | Nov, 2021 | Medium
     
  2. sandy_s

    sandy_s

    Are the existing markets for commodities not enough?
     
  3. thecoder

    thecoder

    This is b/c the US is weaponising everything, incl. US markets and technology as well Internet domains listed under the top-level-domains like .com and .net.

    There is no trust in US anymore, therefore no wonder China wants to have its own markets and technology and not rely on US, as this soon or later surely means being sanctioned or blackmailed or banned by the US.

    The US administration discriminates foreign stocks trading at US markets, recently, and esp. when Trump was in WH, especially Chinese stocks. Chinese stocks listed in the US have lost much of their value as well lost much of their volume b/c of such discriminatory & racist acts by the very US govt. Clearly no fair play by the US. And the WTO does nothing b/c it fears the US...

    The US also seizes any domain it doesn't like, for example many .com and .net domains that were registered and owned by Iran, especially media domains like presstv.com. See what it now says when calling the site https://www.presstv.com/
    It says "The domain presstv.com has been seized by the US government ..."
     
    Last edited: Nov 8, 2021
    rts232 likes this.
  4. JSOP

    JSOP

    Look who is calling the kettle black. The reason why China wants to have its own market is because it wants to raise capital more efficiently and effectively and have more control on the world market to facilitate its take over of Taiwan and perhaps eventually take over the world? ;)

    WHY would the US government want to touch the stocks of these Chinese companies when US pension plans and average investors all invest in them? So it can see its own citizens lose money??!!! LOL The only reason why these stocks have dropped value is because of Chinese communist party's own crackdown on Chinese companies that list with US exchanges like DIDI like how it blocked DIDI when it tried to issue IPO on US exchanges earlier this year.

    Yeah like China doesn't block people's websites and weibo accounts LOL. And besides, US blocks its own people's accounts all the time, even its own president's accounts. Earlier this year, all of the social media companies blocked and banned US president Donald Trump's accounts permanently and he was the US President at the time!!

    You either need to get your head checked or get your head cleared of the Chinese government's brainwashing. Either way, you are dead wrong on everything, as usual.
     
    Last edited: Nov 8, 2021
    beginner66 and jl1575 like this.
  5. thecoder

    thecoder

  6. JSOP

    JSOP

    These delistings are due to those Chinese companies being directly controlled by the Chinese government and/or the Chinese military. Not interested in making the Chinese government and/or the Chinese military rich so one day it can turn around and kill us all. Other than that, US did not lay a finger on any of the other Chinese companies' stocks. If there is any drop in value, it's due to the Chinese government's own interference that caused unnecessary volatility. If you don't want to see Chinese companies' stocks drop in value, tell your government in Beijing to leave those companies the f*** alone and stop intefering in financial markets overseas. Oh wait, but you can't. I forgot.
     
    Last edited: Nov 8, 2021
    beginner66 likes this.
  7. thecoder

    thecoder

    Hey JSOP, I'm telling the truth, but you seem to be not willing to listen.
     
  8. JSOP

    JSOP

    No it's you who needs to stop listening to fake news and Chinese government's brainwashing. US never delisted Alibaba. It just required all foreign companies not just Chinese companies that list on US exchanges to comply with US accounting standards that ensure honest reporting of financial statements. This is to protect US investors but at the same time it also benefits Chinese investors as well.
     
    Last edited: Nov 8, 2021
    beginner66 likes this.
  9. maxinger

    maxinger

    there are quite a few mega China Exchanges like
    Dalian Commodity exchange,
    Shanghai INE,
    Shanghai Futures Exchange,
    Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange

    But they have a scary break system.
    Talk about INE break system.

    They have 4 breaks !!!!
    morning tea break : 15 mins
    lunch break : 2 hours
    afternoon/evening break : 6 hours
    night break : 8 hours


    so you ended up having a price gap here and gap there,
    a price gap up and gap down.
     
    TraDaToR and beginner66 like this.
  10. thecoder

    thecoder

    Hey, @JSOP, FYI: I've nothing to do with China, I'm just an independent observer of the things happening in the geopolitical world arena, and I can assure you the US is shooting into its own feet when it bans and discriminates China. Soon China will be the #1 economy on the planet, it's inevitable. These are the facts.

    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-china-xiaomi-idUSKBN2B906N
     
    Last edited: Nov 8, 2021
    #10     Nov 8, 2021