Iron ore derivatives volumes now annualise to 1x physical market (over 1.4 billion tonnes per year).
Per month derivative trading breaching the 1118mmt per month mark.
HomeRoots Pitch Deck | Investor Insights | April 2024
300715 iron ore derivatives trade breaches 100 million tonne per month
1. MARKET UPDATE – Singapore July 30th, 2015
Offshore Iron ore Derivatives Volumes Hit Key Milestone
Singapore Exchange (SGX) and the CME Group together cleared over 118 million tonnes of iron ore
swaps, options and futures by the 29th
of July. SGX had cleared over 105 million tonnes, making it
the highest trading volume month on record for the Asia-based bourse. This record volume was
recorded in a month which saw significant price volatility for this key steelmaking raw material (see
recent notes on the topic here).
Iron ore derivatives were introduced by the Singapore Exchange in April 2009 and the contracts
have seen rapid uptake and continual growth in annual volumes traded during every calendar year.
It was only by January of this year that Open Interest at the Singapore Exchange breached the 100
million tonne mark for the first time.
By July 29th
, SGX had cleared over 105.7 million tonnes, whilst CME had cleared 12.8 million tonnes
of swaps, options and futures. Their combined volume (exceeding 118.5 million tonnes) is
significant as it annualizes to a figure in excess of 1.4 billion tonnes, which is the approximate size of
the physical global seaborne iron ore market. Many commodities markets see traded derivatives
volumes many multiples of the size of the physical market, reflecting the number of times that
material changes hands, as well as downstream or adjacent market exposure to the commodity
being traded.
Open interest at SGX on the 29th
was over 172 million tonnes, though this typically wanes towards
month-end as positions close out.
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Options
Futures
Swaps
SGX Open Interest (RHS)**
* Total volume cleared by SGX, CME Group, LCH.Clearnet, NASDAQ OMX and ICE; Open interest for SGX only; Jul-15
values preliminary (MTD)
Iron Ore Futures and OTC Derivatives Contracts - Volume Cleared and
Open Interest* (million tonnes)
**End of month,
except Jul-15 (MTD)
2. Option futures stand out as the fastest growing part of SGX’s total volumes, having more than
doubled since January (they were only introduced in August 2014). 12 months after launch,
volumes are already rivalling those of swaps – the original instrument launched in 2009.
The exchange, which uses The Steel Index (TSI) price benchmark for 62% Fe iron ore fines shipped
to China for cash settlement of its iron ore contracts, serves as the leading venue for price risk
management for the global iron ore market. Since launch in 2009, the volume of derivatives traded
on SGX and other offshore exchanges entering the market in later years, including the CME Group,
has more than doubled annually. In 2014, almost 600 million tonnes of swaps, options and futures
were cleared globally, equivalent to almost half of all seaborne physical trade worldwide, and two-
thirds of Chinese imports.
“The growing utility of iron ore derivative contracts is a boon to physical actor’s ability to hedge
against price volatility for traded cargoes, stock inventory and guard against price erosion for
finished steel products” says Tim Hard, TSI Director in Singapore. “However, for the larger ferrous
industry to benefit across-the-board, it is crucial that both coking coal and finished steel derivative
markets grow in tandem with those of iron ore. Liquid markets for these products will provide the
flexibility for steelmakers to properly hedge margins as the global steel industry is entering an
uncertain period of shake-out, restructuring and consolidation”.
Miners and hedging
During July’s torrid price movements, one Australian iron ore miner explicitly revealed their ongoing
options hedging strategy in an investor note. During the commodity supercycle of recent years,
miners have maintained a corporate position of being ‘unhedged’, in order to provide shareholders
with direct exposure to commodity price movements. But with prices now falling amid oversupply,
bringing spot prices closer to breakeven levels for some miners, and hedging strategies are now
increasingly important – not just for the producers, but also banks financing them.
With derivatives volumes rising so that the physical market can be hedged tonne for tonne, it will
be interesting to see whether hedging moves beyond a strategy primarily employed by traders and
end-users. If it does, there is an opportunity for basis risk to be negated along the supply-chain.
International traders and Chinese steel mills have been increasingly vocal in asking for TSI-linked
physical supply contracts in recent months.
Ends
For further information
Please contact: Tim Hard (Singapore) hard@thesteelindex.com
Oscar Tarneberg (Shanghai) o.tarneberg@thesteelindex.com
3. Note to Editors:
The Steel Index (TSI) is a leading specialist source of impartial steel, scrap, iron ore and coking coal price information based on
spot market transactions.
Transaction price data is submitted confidentially to TSI on-line by companies buying and selling a range of relevant steel, iron
ore, scrap, coking coal products. TSI’s index reference prices are then calculated using transparent and verifiable procedures
which are fully aligned with IOSCO principles.
TSI’s iron ore price indices are published daily at 19:00 Singapore/Shanghai time (11:00 GMT) and coking coal price indices daily
at 18:30 Singapore/Shanghai time (10:30 GMT). Steel prices for Northern Europe, Southern Europe and US HRC are published
daily at 14:00 UK time and for ASEAN HRC imports daily at 18:30 Singapore time. Scrap prices for Turkish imports are published
daily at 13:30 UK time. Weekly steel and scrap price indices are published every Monday and Friday respectively, with each price
representing the average transaction price for the previous calendar week.
TSI’s indices are widely used by steel mills, miners, traders, distributors and manufacturing companies worldwide as the basis for
their physical pricing arrangements. TSI’s indices are also used as the industry standard in the settlement of ferrous financial
contracts.
Singapore Exchange (SGX), LCH.Clearnet (London), CME Group (Chicago), NASDAQ OMX Clearing (Oslo) and Intercontinental
Exchange (ICE) all use TSI’s iron ore index for settling their monthly cleared iron ore financial contracts. SGX also uses TSI’s
coking coal indices and hot rolled coil index for ASEAN imports to settle its coking coal and Asian HRC steel futures and swap
contracts respectively. In addition, TSI’s prices are used for the settlement of European hot rolled coil steel contracts on
LCH.Clearnet and CME Clearing Europe and for the settlement of Turkish scrap imports contracts on LCH.Clearnet, CME Europe
and Borsa Istanbul. In all cases, settlement prices are the average of TSI’s reference prices published in the expiring month.
TSI is a Platts business, part of McGraw Hill Financial. Further information on TSI, including a free trial of the service, is available
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