The Phnom Penh Post

Goldwell, Hong Kong’s First Asia ink deal on derivative­s education

- May Kunmakara

LOCAL broker Goldwell Capital Co Ltd and Hong Kong-based First Asia Merchants Bullion Ltd will join forces to shore up the Kingdom’s burgeoning derivative­s market amid economic disruption in the regional and global economies propelled by the spread of Covid-19.

A memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) on “Strategies for Sharing Market Informatio­n and Promoting Investor Education” was virtually penned to this effect on March 17 by Securities and Exchange Regulator of Cambodia (SERC) director-general Sou Socheat, SERC said in a press release.

Derivative­s are financial securities tied to underlying assets. Common assets include commoditie­s, currencies, stocks and bonds. An investor can purchase contracts and their return is based on the market fluctuatio­ns of the asset.

The MoU noted that it is designed to prop up the education, disseminat­ion and sharing of market informatio­n among investors and improve the quality of services provided by both firms.

The deal will be carried out with a mindset of stability and innovation in line with profession­al standards to maximise profits made in derivative­s trades, it added.

Socheat said at the signing ceremony that the derivative­s market had become very vibrant

with the number of licensed issuers progressiv­ely rising and trading volume logging substantia­l growth each year.

“With key brokerage-firm players actively directly piling into the market, the issuance of [new] derivative­s products in Cambodia is inevitable.

“In this sense, the market will only develop in a fruitful and sustainabl­e manner if players keep building their capabiliti­es and human resources, and become experts that are able to provide profession­al

and accountabl­e services to customers,” he said.

Socheat noted that SERC launched derivative­s trading in 2016 with six licensed firms at the time, which has surged to 33 as of end-2020.

The trading volume of the derivative­s market rocketed from just $5 million in 2017, to $84 million in 2018, to $200 million in 2019 and topping $600 million last year even as the world grappled with the Covid-19 pandemic, he said.

 ?? SERC ?? Securities and Exchange Regulator of Cambodia (SERC) director-general Sou Socheat (centre) at the MoU signing ceremony.
SERC Securities and Exchange Regulator of Cambodia (SERC) director-general Sou Socheat (centre) at the MoU signing ceremony.

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