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CME joins bitcoin revolution

Digital currency makes smooth debut on world’s biggest exchange

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NEW YORK: The world’s biggest exchange just joined the bitcoin revolution.

Bitcoin futures started trading Sunday night at CME Group Inc’s venue, a week after Chicago rival Cboe Global Markets Inc introduced similar derivative­s on the volatile cryptocurr­ency.

CME is a much bigger player in futures, so many traders expected it to make a bigger splash in the nascent space.

CME got off to a faster start with more efficient pricing. Its most-active contract changed hands 221 times in the first hour versus 570 during Cboe’s debut.

But that’s a win because CME’s contracts are five times more valuable – they’re tied to five bitcoins compared with only one with Cboe’s futures.

“People were better prepared” for the start of trading at CME, said Bobby Cho, head of trading at Cumberland, the cryptocurr­ency trading unit of DRW Holdings LLC. “They knew how they were going to hedge their positions.”

CME’s futures traded at about 2% above bitcoin itself as of 11:56am in London; in the first day, Cboe’s got as much as 13% above, a sign trading was relatively inefficien­t.

Bitcoin yesterday climbed 9% from its Friday New York close to US$19,190, approachin­g the record US$19,511 reached hours earlier.

The CME and Cboe bitcoin futures have some distinct features. The price of Cboe’s product is derived from the cryptocurr­ency’s price at a single exchange; CME’s is based off four.

“We were waiting for the launch of the CME futures because the price is more robust and the exchange trades much larger volumes,” Jose Miguel Nascimento, head trader at cryptocurr­ency fund Solidus Capital, said in a telephone interview from Mexico City.

“Futures are a very positive developmen­t for the bitcoin market, as it will help everyone from miners to traders hedge risk, and having a price curve will help limit price swings.”

The CME futures are another step into the mainstream financial world for an asset created in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis as an alternativ­e to banks and government-issued currencies.

The contracts, which settle in US dollars and trade on regulated exchanges, can be bought by institutio­nal investors that are prohibited from buying bitcoin directly on largely unregulate­d exchanges.

“One of the biggest issues when it comes to investing institutio­nally in digital assets is banks and larger institutio­ns can’t hold an unregulate­d instrument in their balance sheet, and a futures contract is something they can hold,” said Gabor Gurbacs, director of digital-asset strategy at Van-Eck Associates Corp.

With futures, “you don’t hold the physical bitcoin, which solves custody issues and counterpar­ty risks with these less-regulated exchanges.”

To protect against wild, mistaken price swings, CME will briefly pause trading if the contracts rise or fall 7% or 13%, and prices won’t be allowed to move more than 20%. That wasn’t necessary in its debut.

Cboe also has volatility halts, which were triggered in the initial hours of trading a week ago, and its January contract rose as much as 26% on the first day.

Cboe’s website stalled during its launch. CME’s seemed to weather the traffic.

“It’s only one-lots,” said Garrett See, chief executive officer of crypto trading firm DV Chain of the initial CME trades. “The prices are moving around pretty fast.” The order book was pretty thin and “the orders that are there are very small.”

Futures open up arbitrage opportunit­ies – the chance to bet prices of the derivative­s and the underlying cryptocurr­ency will converge. Last week, Cboe’s product was priced as much as 13% higher than bitcoin, but that quickly narrowed. By Sunday night, it was similar to CME’s.

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