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Options and Derivatives Trading on NSE
mwekez@ji
#21 Posted : Tuesday, September 17, 2013 9:02:28 AM
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Joined: 5/31/2011
Posts: 5,121
Museveni
#22 Posted : Tuesday, September 17, 2013 11:05:51 AM
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Joined: 8/16/2012
Posts: 660


Museveni wrote:
.....What are the 'penalties' put forward if one cannot fulfil the promise as agreed upon at the agreed time ?

Does one lose the paid up fee & the securities holder has the discretion now to sell at the 'open market' at the market rate, or the rights holder has the authority to choose who can buy the securities?
Live and learn; and don’t forget, nothing ventured, nothing gained.
kenyamoja
#23 Posted : Tuesday, September 17, 2013 11:18:31 AM
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Joined: 3/26/2010
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Location: chicago, il
Derivatives are not bad. Bad players make them sound bad. A commodities exchange is very welcome at the NSE. It will promote price stabilization for most if not all commodities. here are a few insights about futures trading....

futures are contracts for future delivery of a product. They explicitly define the quantity, quality, price per unit, date of delivery, method of delivery as well as the buyer and seller.
Futures contracts are highly leveraged. i.e you only need a small investment (initial margin) to enter into a contract. This initial margin, usually less than 10% of the value of the contract, must be deposited in your trading account, and is adjusted daily to reflect market activity.
The 2 parties involved are the seller (holds a short position)and the buyer (holds a long position).
the two main characters in the game are HEDGERS & SPECULATORS.
Hedgers either own (eg. a farmer) or seek to own (eg. a manufacturer)a commodity.
The farmer in Kericho wishes to fetch the highest price possible for his next harvest and therefore enters in to a contract with Unga LTD to sell 1000 sacks of maize at KSH 1,000 a sack. Unga agrees to it because they don't wish to risk waiting until next harvest just in case the price of a sack of maize shoots up to KSH 1,100. This secures Unga LTD the lowest possible price.
Before the date of contract maturation (expiration), if the price of a sack of maize goes up to 1,100, Unga gains 100 & farmer looses 100 and vice versa. Gains & loses are debited or credited in their respective accounts.
Either party can close their positions at any time before contract date. Farmer can always sell to the market at market prices and vice versa for Unga.
The speculators are people who seek to make a profit from fluctuating prices. A speculator taking a short position will sell a contract at a higher price, hoping the prices will fall and make a profit from buying the same contract at a lower price. A speculator taking a long position will buy a contract low hoping to make a profit by selling it high.
The genius of it is the hedge against risks of price fluctuations. Just imagine the benefits that would come out of this in a high inflation environment.
A MAN FOREWARNED IS A MAN FOREARMED
mwekez@ji
#24 Posted : Tuesday, September 17, 2013 11:54:57 PM
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Joined: 5/31/2011
Posts: 5,121
CMA seeks full control of futures market

The capital markets regulator has published draft rules for the proposed futures market, pulling the plug on the NSE’s attempts to have control over the planned exchange.

The draft rules published on Monday by the Capital Markets Authority (CMA) show the regulator will retain powers to license brokers and approve the listing and trading of all futures market contracts.

The Nairobi Securities Exchange had in a presentation made to MPs earlier this year pushed for amendment of the CMA Act seeking to be allowed leeway to develop, list and trade futures contracts.

The CMA however made a strong response asking MPs to allow it to retain all regulatory powers over the proposed exchange.
Museveni
#25 Posted : Wednesday, September 18, 2013 8:17:22 AM
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Joined: 8/16/2012
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1. THE CAPITAL MARKETS (BUSINESS OF FUTURES CONTRACTS) REGULATIONS, 2013

PDF Doc.



2. THE CAPITAL MARKETS (LICENSING REQUIREMENTS FOR FUTURES BROKERS AND CONDUCT OF FUTURES BUSINESS) REGULATIONS, 2013

PDF Doc.
Live and learn; and don’t forget, nothing ventured, nothing gained.
StocksinMotion
#26 Posted : Wednesday, September 18, 2013 9:35:38 AM
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Joined: 8/6/2013
Posts: 3
These products are all about Greed,, But lets look at the bright side of it,, They will increase liquidity in that they allow day trading.. Off course they will make a few Wazuans Millionaires out of it..The NSE Market Segmnent will also diversify from the usual Equities and Bonds to Derivatives-Commodities,Futures, Options nad ETFs.
mwekez@ji
#27 Posted : Wednesday, February 05, 2014 10:23:45 AM
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Joined: 5/31/2011
Posts: 5,121
Handbook on Central Counterparty (CCP) Clearing of Futures and Derivatives Contracts
(CMA - 04.02.2014)

http://www.cma.or.ke/index.php?...p;gid=295&Itemid=102
mpobiz
#28 Posted : Thursday, January 29, 2015 10:02:00 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 8/10/2010
Posts: 2,264
Derivatives

This thing has now arrived in our dear country. We should all run and be refugees in somalia. I hear people who engage themselves with this thing are worse than the alshabaab
Politics is just things to keep the people divided and foolish and put your trust in men and none of them can do nothing for you...
enyands
#29 Posted : Friday, January 30, 2015 1:48:20 AM
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Joined: 12/25/2014
Posts: 2,300
Location: kenya
I'm a little bit lost. What could you be talking of
chiaroscuro
#30 Posted : Friday, January 30, 2015 8:32:12 AM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 2/2/2012
Posts: 1,134
Location: Nairobi
enyands wrote:
I'm a little bit lost. What could you be talking of


Welcome to Wazua....in layman terms.....

Derivatives are essentially promises to buy/sell a security at a certain price on a certain date.

A derivative market is where these promises are traded.

NSE is starting a derivatives market.
Swenani
#31 Posted : Friday, January 30, 2015 9:00:26 AM
Rank: User


Joined: 8/15/2013
Posts: 13,237
Location: Vacuum
enyands wrote:
I'm a little bit lost. What could you be talking of

Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly
If Obiero did it, Who Am I?
Swenani
#32 Posted : Friday, January 30, 2015 9:09:36 AM
Rank: User


Joined: 8/15/2013
Posts: 13,237
Location: Vacuum
mpobiz wrote:
This thing has now arrived in our dear country. We should all run and be refugees in somalia. I hear people who engage themselves with this thing are worse than the alshabaab

They say hedging is not speculation but this thing willlead to insider trading and speculation galore
If Obiero did it, Who Am I?
mic_mic
#33 Posted : Friday, January 30, 2015 11:17:19 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 12/30/2012
Posts: 545
Location: NBI
mpobiz wrote:
This thing has now arrived in our dear country. We should all run and be refugees in somalia. I hear people who engage themselves with this thing are worse than the alshabaab


First of all, derivatives are not a bad thing. People are bad. A derivative is like a knife -- you can use it for good or for bad. So comparing derivatives to alshabaab rubbish!

Derivatives can be really good for stabilizing markets (volatility) and stabilizing prices. This is a good thing. Maybe you should read a bit more into derivatives before making proclamations.

That said however, i admit these sophisticated financial products have been abused by unscrupulous finance professionals.

Finally, derivatives are traded in Nairobi everyday! Where? Westlands. Prop trading desks & Chicago Mercentile Exchange registered Traders. I know because i used to work for a prop trading firm. I dabbled in Corn, Wheat and Soy futures contracts and spreads.

Here is a screen shot of what used to be my trading desk

BITCOIN TRADERS KENYA Whatsapp group +254 705 299 429
mic_mic
#34 Posted : Friday, January 30, 2015 11:22:14 AM
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Joined: 12/30/2012
Posts: 545
Location: NBI
Also, if you're not a fan of derivatives, don't invest.

I was going through CMA Act Ammendment 2013, and derivatives and 'normal' securities are clearly distinguished with a special category for derivative agents for example. You should have a look at it.

Hope this helps :)
BITCOIN TRADERS KENYA Whatsapp group +254 705 299 429
derick
#35 Posted : Friday, January 30, 2015 2:50:06 PM
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Joined: 1/10/2015
Posts: 411
Hi ni Nini tena?
Your income is directly related to your philosophy, Not the economy.-Jim Rohn
chiaroscuro
#36 Posted : Friday, January 30, 2015 4:21:51 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 2/2/2012
Posts: 1,134
Location: Nairobi
derick wrote:
Hi ni Nini tena?



Welcome to Wazua....in layman terms.....

Derivatives are essentially promises to buy/sell a security at a certain price on a certain date.

A derivative market is where these promises are traded.

NSE is starting a derivatives market.
agile
#37 Posted : Friday, January 30, 2015 4:55:11 PM
Rank: New-farer


Joined: 1/9/2015
Posts: 19
Location: NAIROBI
keenly distilling charlatans comments on this 'monster"...........
derick
#38 Posted : Friday, January 30, 2015 9:43:37 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 1/10/2015
Posts: 411
chiaroscuro wrote:
derick wrote:
Hi ni Nini tena?



Welcome to Wazua....in layman terms.....

Derivatives are essentially promises to buy/sell a security at a certain price on a certain date.

A derivative market is where these promises are traded.

NSE is starting a derivatives market.

Now I get it.NSE prepares for derivatives market launch - http://www.standardmedia...e/?articleID=2000149759 via @StandardKenya
Your income is directly related to your philosophy, Not the economy.-Jim Rohn
shadowinvestor
#39 Posted : Wednesday, March 11, 2015 6:45:48 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 1/13/2012
Posts: 139


A proprietary trading firm has clawed its way into the big leagues using recruits from India, Kenya and China

Anshuman Mishra’s working day inside Bangalore’s Diamond District office building began when the sun rose over the City of London and ended just after lunch in Chicago. Mr Mishra held a new kind of job in this Indian city of call centres and tech groups. He was a futures trader seeking his fortune on western exchanges.
Supplied with Bloomberg terminals, stacks of analyst research, biryani and foreign capital, he and fellow young traders — graduates of the best Indian universities — learnt to decipher Federal Reserve statements and US oil inventory reports published 8,500 miles away in Washington. They watched from afar as Lehman Brothers failed, then coolly traded through the aftermath. One of Mr Mishra’s colleagues made so much money shorting crude oil in 2008 that he bought a string of flats around Bangalore.

“We were very in tune with what the rest of world was doing. It was a unique position, because I don’t think the rest of the world knew what we were doing,” recalls Mr Mishra, who traded US and European stock indices until 2009.
His former employer, Hertshten Group, has quietly broken into the top ranks of traders on global derivatives bourses in Chicago, London and Frankfurt. Yet few of its 700 employees live anywhere near these financial centres. Most are in emerging and frontier markets such as India, China, Kenya and Mauritius, as well as Israel. Most still execute orders with a manual mouse click even as rivals are investing millions to shave microseconds off trades.
Hertshten is a proprietary trading firm, betting its own capital on global exchanges. Such traders’ heavy volumes grease the financial system, allowing others to easily enter or exit positions. While “high-frequency” firms have attracted intense attention for their lightning-fast trades, “point and click” armies such as Hertshten have grown largely unnoticed.
Its success shows how the offshoring that began with manufacturing and services is now encroaching on the diehard capitalists of the western trading industry. “Jobs that are disappearing in Chicago are appearing in Nairobi,” says a US-based trading executive.
$1,000 - the typical monthly salary for a new graduate trader in India, compared with $5,000 a month in Chicago
The group now ranks among the top five sources of energy futures volume on CME Group’s New York Mercantile Exchange; top five in grain volume on its Chicago Board of Trade; top three in interest rates and in soft commodities such as sugar on the Intercontinental Exchange; and top 20 on Eurex, a derivatives division of Deutsche Börse, says Marc Lagesse, Hertshten’s chief executive. The company transacts 250m-300m contracts a year, he adds.
Such volume increases the odds that a farmer selling corn futures delivered on the Illinois River or a corporate treasurer hedging short-term UK interest rates will have a 25-year-old in Gurgaon, Wuhan or Nairobi on the other side of the deal, perhaps dreaming of becoming a “trade mogul,” as Hertshten calls its online recruitment tool.
Futures markets — where the future values of assets from wheat to bonds are negotiated — represent a huge opportunity for proprietary trading firms. The $1,100tn in derivatives that changed hands on CME alone last year was 13.5 times the value of all global equity trading, estimated at $81tn by the World Federation of Exchanges.

Proprietary traders survive in fragile symbiosis with exchanges, which both police their behaviour and reward their volumes with fee discounts and rebates. Exchanges reserve special perks for traders in developing countries, and industry executives say Hertshten is a recipient. In return, the group has been training a far-flung generation of traders who are loyal exchange customers.
The rise of proprietary groups in emerging markets comes as electronic trading loosens ties between exchanges and the local communities that built them. Chicago-based CME said last month it would close “open outcry” futures trading pits that date to the 19th century after floor volumes shrank to 1 per cent of the total. Futures floors on ICE are already extinct; 30 per cent of CME’s electronic trading revenue now comes from abroad.
As the pits emptied, some ex-floor traders stayed close to home and created electronic proprietary firms such as Jump Trading of Chicago and New York’s Virtu Financial, founded by a former Nymex gasoline trader. Hertshten Group is owned by Gedon Hertshten, who began his career on the CBOT floor in 1978 and became a director of the London International Financial Futures and Options Exchange, now part of ICE.
250m-300m - contracts executed each year by Hertshten Group
But telecommunications improvements drew distant cities nearer. Orders now bounce between India and Chicago in milliseconds. Mr Lagesse says: “The fact that it was now electronic meant that rather than having to be in London, New York or Chicago to participate in markets, you could now be based wherever you wanted to be, frankly. You could be based in Rio or Mumbai or Beijing.”
To a high-frequency trader such as Jump or Virtu, a millisecond is an eternity. But the “vast majority” of Hertshten traders still point and click with their mouses; computer algorithms account for less than a quarter of volumes. To Hertshten, being fast is important but being the fastest is not worth the high cost of the technology.
“If I’m sitting on South Wacker Drive [in Chicago] I’m always going to be faster than someone sitting in Mumbai,” acknowledges Mr Lagesse.
Fees: Volume discounts come under scrutiny
A Chicago Mercantile Exchange sign is seen outside CME Group Inc.'s headquarters in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., on Thursday, May 20, 2010. CME Group is the world's largest futures and options exchange. Photographer: Tim Boyle/Bloomberg
You need volume to get volume. That is a mantra for the executives who run futures exchanges. To ensure a minimum level of activity, exchanges give fee discounts to proprietary trading groups and others willing to buy and sell contracts steadily, especially fledgling ones. These incentive schemes have existed for years but are now drawing scrutiny.
Continue reading
Hertshten is not the only proprietary trader standing by point-and-click. London-based OSTC has 16 offices in 10 countries including Poland, Russia, Turkey and India. Jonny Aucamp, OSTC chief executive, says his staff also trade this way and have exchange volumes “not dissimilar” to Hertshten’s.
If Hertshten is at a speed disadvantage, how does it compete? By hiring hundreds of bright graduates at a fraction of the cost of western traders.
The company’s trading business spread overseas from London to Israel in 2002, then entered India in 2004. Mr Hertshten — whose company declined to make him available for an interview — laid out his vision in an industry magazine column in 2009.
“The talent pool that the industry must actively seek and recruit consists of technology-savvy, extremely intelligent young individuals who are willing and able to work the long hours the exchanges are open,” he wrote. “New talent of the sort the industry should be recruiting can be found in the science and engineering departments of developing countries’ top universities.”
In practice, this means approaching schools such as the Indian Institutes of Technology, famous for their minuscule acceptance rates. At a workshop at Nairobi’s Strathmore University, delegates from Hertshten’s Futures First division and the CME pitched to students on the firm’s “friendly work environment and hefty financial rewards” and cited bonuses of up to Ks100m ($1.1m), according to a university report. (The sum is 948 times Kenya’s per-capita gross national income.)

Founders of the firm saw parallels between early overtures to graduates and Million Dollar Arm, the film in which a US sports agent scouts Indian cricket bowlers to pitch for a major-league baseball team.
“They had no idea what futures were, how it all worked, and yet here they were being hired,” Mr Lagesse says.
High employee turnover — about 60 per cent of hires leave within two years, says Mr Lagesse — deters some applicants. Mr Hertshten is known to have tried to assuage parents fearful over their children’s careers. “People outside the industry see it as scandalous. They think it’s gambling and pure luck,” says Rajat Pal Gupta, a former commodities trader at Futures First, who says his own volumes approached a tenth of the London white sugar market.
$1,100tn - the value of the derivatives trades on the CME last year, 13.5 times the value of all equity trading
Tests gauge applicants’ maths skills and logic. Interviewers ask if they are aggressive or passive and prefer a fixed salary or a bonus, former employees say. “They wanted to get a sense of whether I had trader instincts in me,” says Rajeev Ranjan, a former employee in India. “I come from a country where financial literacy was very, very minimal. I didn’t even know what was the concept of a trader.” Now Mr Ranjan studies markets as a technical expert at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.
Once appointed, recruits absorb the culture. Mr Mishra’s colleagues in Bangalore screened Wall Street and Rogue Trader, the film about the collapse of Barings Bank. “We had the occasional bouts of insanity. People chucking their phones across desks. Someone smashing their computer monitor because they had lost a tonne of money. Things like that,” Mr Mishra recalls.
Some traders earn $1m bonuses and drive BMWs or Audis to the office, say former employees. But a typical new hire in India receives a $1,000 monthly base salary, people familiar with the company say. In Chicago a graduate with technical skills might command as much as $5,000 a month in base salary, plus a bonus, according to Objective Paradigm, a recruitment company. “One of the attractions is great talent at an incredibly reasonable price,” says Michael Gorham, a finance professor at Illinois Institute of Technology.

Hertshten has its headquarters in Mauritius. Most employees work for its Futures First subsidiaries. The company says trades are conducted through a Mauritius-based company called Mercury Derivatives and cleared by GH Financials, a London-based broker controlled by Mr Hertshten. Mr Hertshten’s son Ron told Automated Trader magazine in 2012: “We had our back office in London and all our traders in India.”
Hertshten has five Futures First offices in India, the most of any country. Executives describe Futures First as a “service” company and not a trading company, even though staff tout their trading experience on LinkedIn. Bobby Parikh of BMR Advisors, a Mumbai-based accountancy and consultancy, says India-based companies face a 30 per cent tax rate on short-term capital gains from trading on foreign futures exchanges. When India-based employees provide support services and do not undertake trading, companies can sharply reduce this tax exposure.
30% - percentage of CME's electronic trading revenue that comes from abroad
Rival traders say proprietary groups in emerging markets receive unfair assistance from the western exchanges. For example, CME’s incentive programme offers proprietary groups outside North America nearly half off the non-member fee for trading Nymex crude oil. ICE runs “new jurisdiction” incentive programmes in US natural gas, sugar, coffee, cocoa, cotton and other commodities.
A US proprietary trader complains: “It’s one thing to get yourself knocked out because of competition. It’s another thing when competition is being financially subsidised.”
Mr Lagesse says he and exchange officials discuss how to improve volumes and liquidity, but Hertshten does not receive special treatment. “As far as I know, we are neither benefiting nor suffering from different deals,” he says.
murchr
#40 Posted : Thursday, July 30, 2015 12:00:41 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 2/26/2012
Posts: 15,980
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Kenya's Nairobi Securities Exchange has delayed the roll out of a derivatives market to this quarter from the earlier target date of the second quarter to adequately prepare the market for the launch, it said on Wednesday.

NSE plans to offer derivative instruments, becoming the second bourse in Sub Sahara Africa to do so after Johannesburg, in a bid to boost liquidity. [ID:nL5N0W81II]

"The launch has been deferred slightly. We are targeting this quarter," the bourse said.

"It is imperative that prior to launch of this product, the market understands clearly the positive impact of derivatives as tools to manage investment risk," it said.

Progress had been made towards the setting up of the market, the NSE said, citing the establishment of a clearing house, a guarantee fund and an oversight committee made up of industry professionals.

NSE wants to become the third biggest exchange on the continent, up from fifth currently, its chief executive, Geoffrey Odundo told Reuters in March.

The Kenyan bourse serves as an entry point for foreign funds looking to tap into fast economic growth rates in east Africa but it currently ranks behind South Africa, Nigeria, Egypt and Morocco in terms of market size.

(Reporting by Duncan Miriri; Editing by James Macharia)
"There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore
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