Business Standard

Cross- delivery centres may be a challenge: Brokers

- DILIP KUMAR JHA

Even as the BSE has announced its preparedne­ss for the commodity futures play, its brokers have some concerns, especially around delivery of bullion at the centre of choice.

This means, the exchange might offer delivery of the commodity at a centre different from the one chosen by a trader in case the underlying is not available at the centre of choice. Transporta­tion, premiums, discount, value at risk and other costs involved in the changed delivery centre are factored in the actual price payable for sellers. But BSE traders want the exchange to offer delivery of bullion at the centre of their choice.

Existing commodity exchanges take a leeway in the delivery of commoditie­s after the expiry of a running contract. They have a number of identified delivery centres across all deliverabl­e commoditie­s. The issue facing the BSE is not gold-specific; it applies to all commoditie­s across exchanges, according to brokers. Since the BSE is launching commodity business with precious metals futures, there is a scope to look at the issue afresh.

“We used to trade in bullion on commodity exchanges earlier. The exchange offered the delivery of gold to us from a remote centre. Since the transporta­tion of gold from that centre was difficult, we accepted the delivery, assuming this would not be repeated. But, gold delivery was again offered from the same centre. After that, we stopped trading on that commodity exchange. Now, the BSE needs to address the delivery problems that traders have faced on commodity exchanges,” says A P Shukla, president, Joindre Capital Services, a member of all recognised equity and commodity exchanges in India.

Many brokers who attended BSE’s seminar last Thursday expressed their apprehensi­ons over trading in deliverabl­e commoditie­s, including gold.

Following the Securities and Exchange Board of India's (Sebi’s) go-ahead to universal exchanges — meaning equity exchanges could offer commodity futures, and vice versa — BSE last week showed its interest in launching a commodity derivative­s contract effective October 1, 2018.

BSE Managing Director Ashishkuma­r Chauhan had on January 4 said, “Our 35 million trading clients can trade in commoditie­s on a single screen with no membership fee. We will also offer lower transactio­n charges to our members for commodity futures as our margin cost stands near zero. Out technology is world-class and ready to accept large orders, and we have proved that in equity and currency futures & options.”

BSE, however, is planning to launch futures trading in bullion (gold and silver), energy (crude oil and natural gas) and base metals (copper, aluminium, lead and zinc) without any fresh investment in technology upgrade. “BSE needs to address all technical issues that brokers face. But we are enthusiast­ic about BSE’s entry into commodity futures. With lower transactio­n charges and, most importantl­y, no membership fee, we would be trading in commoditie­s on the BSE,” said Alok Churiwala, former vice-chairman of BSE Brokers' Forum and director of Churiwala Securities Pvt Ltd.

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