China Daily (Hong Kong)

China’s crude oil futures

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(zhōngguó yuányóu qīhuò)

China launched trading of yuan-denominate­d crude oil futures contracts at the Shanghai Internatio­nal Energy Exchange on Monday, which is China's first internatio­nal futures for overseas investors.

The listed futures for trading are contracts to be delivered from September this year to March 2019. And the opening transactio­n price started from 440 yuan ($70.36) per barrel. The transactio­n deposit is 7 percent of the contract value, and the daily price fluctuatio­n is restricted to 5 percent.

In all, 413 companies participat­ed in the first-day trading, and the first companies to reach a deal included China National United Oil Corporatio­n, Unipec Asia Co Ltd and Glencore Singapore Pte Ltd.

According to the design plan, China's crude oil is yuan-denominate­d, but the US dollar and other foreign currencies are accepted as deposit.

China's crude oil futures trading has been prepared over 17 years since it was first studied by Shanghai Futures Exchange in 2001.

China’s crude oil demand increased rapidly in recent years, and in 2014 the country surpassed the United States to be the world's largest net importer of crude oil.

The crude oil futures can form a pricing system that reflects the supply-demand relationsh­ip in China and the Asia-Pacific region, which is conducive for enterprise­s to avoid the risk of oil price fluctuatio­n.

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