A futures exchange ordinarily helps businesses to mitigate against future losses arising from fluctuations in prices. FILE
By WASHINGTON GIKUNJU
The NSE is set to open a futures exchange for
trading of currency, market indices and interest rate contracts by the
end of this year.
Chief executive of the Nairobi Securities Exchange
(NSE) Peter Mwangi said the bourse had already installed a trading
system to handle the transactions but was yet to draft and submit
operation rules to the capital markets regulator for approval.
A futures exchange ordinarily helps businesses to mitigate against future losses arising from fluctuations in prices.
“The market is ready, people need those
instruments to hedge against risks,” said Mr Mwangi in an interview.
Futures contracts involve signing agreements to exchange specified goods
such as currency or oil at a specified future date and price.
Kenyan companies such as beer maker EABL, Kenya Airways, oil marketer KenolKobil,
and cement manufacturer East African Portland Cement have at different
times signed hedging contracts to cushion against fluctuations in the
exchange rate and oil prices.
A local futures exchange would save Kenyan companies costs that they incur in signing the contracts abroad.
Mr Mwangi said the new exchange would focus on
basic futures contracts including interest rate and currency hedges as
well as oil purchase.
“Later we can introduce other more complex futures contracts as the market grows,” said Mr Mwangi.
A futures exchange also involves trade in
commodities such as cereals and minerals; some of which require huge
and efficiently run warehousing facilities to facilitate settlement of
contracts.
The Capital Markets Authority (CMA) had last year
lobbied Parliament to set stringent regulations for a futures exchange,
including setting a minimum capital requirement of Sh1 billion and
denying NSE powers to set trading fees.
CMA’s take was that futures markets involve huge
transactions that can bring down a weak exchange which does not have
financial muscle to absorb potential losses.
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