The Borneo Post

Bitcoin jumps as CME unveils plan for futures contract

-

NEW YORK: Bitcoin prices rose after exchange giant CME Group announced it planned to launch a futures marketplac­e for the cryptocurr­ency in the fourth quarter.

The move is a vote of confidence in the controvers­ial virtual currency, which has not been listed on a major exchange previously. The CME operates a range of prominent exchanges around the world and handles three billion contracts a year.

“Given increasing client interest in the evolving cryptocurr­ency markets, we have decided to introduce a bitcoin futures contract,” said Terry Duffy, chief executive of the Chicago-based CME exchange group.

“As the world’s largest regulated FX marketplac­e, CME Group is the natural home for this new vehicle that will provide investors with transparen­cy, price discovery and risk transfer capabiliti­es.”

The start of the exchange is contingent on regulatory approvals, CME said. The contract will be for bitcoin futures, a derivative product that sets pricing for a commodity or financial instrument at a future date. Some types of futures contracts rarely result in delivery of the underlying asset.

Since November 2016, CME has published each day at 1600 GMT a bitcoin reference rate (BTT) based on the trade flow of major spot exchanges.

The announceme­nt sets up a race between CME and its Chicago-based rival CBOE Holdings,

Given increasing client interest in the evolving cryptocurr­ency markets, we have decided to introduce a bitcoin futures contract. Terry Duffy, chief executive of CME exchange group

which in August announced plans to launch a cash-settled bitcoin futures contract in the fourth quarter of 2017 or early 2018 with the Gemini Trust Company. The CBOE said the launch depended on a review by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

The cryptocurr­ency market has growth to US$172 billion, with bitcoin accounting for 54 per cent, CME said.

Near 1445GMT, bitcoin was worth US$6,367, up 4.3 per cent compared with Monday’s closing price, according to Bloomberg.

The value of bitcoin has risen rapidly since its launch in February 2009 from a few cents to about US$1,000 at the start of 2017 before this year’s surge.

The currency has encountere­d some roadblocks. China barred its trade on virtual currency markets, and some prominent figures in finance, such as JPMorgan Chase chief executive have also sharply criticized bitcoin. — AFP

 ??  ?? Bitcoin prices rose, after exchange giant CME Group announced it planned to launch a futures marketplac­e for the cryptocurr­ency in the fourth quarter. — AFP photo
Bitcoin prices rose, after exchange giant CME Group announced it planned to launch a futures marketplac­e for the cryptocurr­ency in the fourth quarter. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia