Options designed to follow payday loan prices
The Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) offers futures and options contracts designed to follow home prices in 10 US cities, as well as an aggregated national index. CME opened trading in contracts based on the S&P/Case–Shiller Home Price indices on 22 May 2006.
CME housing futures and options are cash-settled to a weighted composite index of national real estate prices, as well as to specific markets in the following US cities: Boston, Chicago, Denver, LasVegas, Los Angeles, Miami, NewYork, San Diego, San Francisco andWashington DC. Trading in the housing contracts has been relatively thin in the first year, with an average daily volume of about 50 contracts. The notional value of all outstanding futures contracts was slightly above US$ 77 million in August 2006. In total, the traded notional was approximately US$ 340 million in 2006. In early 2007, volume was still low and only about 25 contracts a day were traded on average. According to the CME, there is a “huge educational need” for this new derivatives market.
Critics say that the design of the contracts has held the market back, as they only go out to one year while most investors want to hedge for longer periods of time. This issue was addressed in September 2007, when the CME extended its contracts on the S&P/Case–Shiller index out to 60 months.


Comments are closed.