FiNETIK – Asia and Latin America – Market News Network

Asia and Latin America News Network focusing on Financial Markets, Energy, Environment, Commodity and Risk, Trading and Data Management

Brazil: BM&FBOVESPA Exchange news and events March 2010

SunGard Global Trading authorized as DMA provider

BM&FBOVESPA has authorized SunGard Global Trading to act as a provider of direct market access (DMA) for the BM&F segment (derivatives markets). SunGard offer brokerage houses and its clients an order routing system that allows direct trading of financial and agricultural derivatives traded at the Exchange. BVMF is also working with SunGard to develop a back-office solution for North American clients that trade agricultural and financial derivatives in Brazil.

Voluntary carbon credit market auction

BM&FBOVESPA will hold on 08 April 2010, a voluntary carbon credit market auction. A total amount of 180,000 voluntary carbon units from projects managed by the Social Carbon Company will be auctioned. The auction will be held in three sessions, with a lot traded per session. The initial bidding prices will be indicated by lots that vary in accordance to the vintages and are priced at BRL 10.00 to BRL 12.00 per unit. The first transaction will occur at 1:00 p.m. (Brazil Time) and will be carried out by BM&FBOVESPA’s Carbon Credit Trading System.

White paper on post-trade infra-structure

The Exchange divulged, on March 11th, a white paper entitled “BM&FBOVESPA’s Post-Trade Infra-Structure – Integration Challenges and Opportunities”. The document aims to stimulate debate among market participants, regulatory agents, and others interested in the integration of post-trade activities and systems (netting, settlement, central counterpart, and central depository). BVMF expects the participants to contribute to the consolidation of the path to be adopted in relation to integration opportunities. The white paper can be found at www.bmfbovespa.com.br, in Notices.

BM&FBOVESPA establishes new historic record in contracts traded and in ID futures

BM&FBOVESPA established on 18 March 2010 a new historic record in the total number of contracts traded in the derivatives segment, with 10,157,779 contracts. The previous record of 5,716,789 contracts was set on 17 March 2010. Trading of ID futures contracts also registered a historic record on 18 March 2010, reaching a mark of 6,093,795 contracts. The previous record of 4,544,750 contracts was also set on 17 March.

UN´s Principles for Responsible Investment

On March the 3rd, BM&FBOVESPA formalized its adherence to the Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI), a United Nations initiative developed by financial markets to promote responsible investment. The document was signed during the first international PRI meeting held in Brazil. BM&FBOVESPA intends to set an example for other investors to adhere to the principals and also stimulate listed companies to report their socio-environmental initiatives to the market.

BM&FBOVESPA announces earnings for fourth quarter of 2009

Net income of R$220.2 million increased 8.8% year-on-year, whereas adjusted net income of R$315.3 million. 4Q09 net revenues of R$424.8 million increased 19.5% from the same quarter one year ago (pro forma). In a comparison of the twelve months to December 2009, net revenues dropped 6.2% to R$1,502.5 million. 4Q09 operating expenses reached R$ 160.4 million, a 25.2% increase from 4Q081 (pro forma) and a 21.0% increase from 3Q09’s. In 2009, recurring expenses reached R$446.7 million, a 12.9% drop from 2008 (pro forma), as adjusted by expenses related to employee compensation in 1Q09 (R$ 18 million) and in line with the target of R$450.0 million for 2009. EBITDA totaled R$276.4 million for the fourth quarter, up 17.3% from 4Q08 (pro forma). Click here for full earnings release.

BM&FBOVESPA begins trading three new ETFs

As of 23 February 2010, BM&FBOVESPA began trading three new Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs): iShares Brazil Index IBrX-100 (BRAX11); iShares BM&FBOVESPA Consumption Index (CSMO11); and iShares BM&FBOVESPA Real Estate Index (MOBI11). The new ETFs are managed by BlackRock Brazil. The Exchange also offers four other ETFs, which track the Ibovespa, Small Cap, MidLarge Cap, and IBrX-50 indices. Click here for further information on BM&FBOVESPA’s ETFs.

Exchange’s new communication interface with Mega Bolsa

As of April 20, 2010, the Mega Direct, a new electronic communication interface, will become the only form of access for all automatic DMA connections to the Mega Bolsa, BVMF equities segment trading platform. The tool enables the insertion, modification, and cancelation of offers placed on the Mega Bolsa. The new interface performs up to tenfold faster than the current system.

Exchange’s meeting in São Paulo

BVMF hosted the Ibero-American Federation of Exchanges meeting in São Paulo on March 19. The objective of the event was to bring together member exchanges from Latin America, Portugal, and Spain to debate the latest market trends of the region. The themes discussed were the recent regional integration initiatives; regulation; and the development of the derivatives market in Latin America. The meeting also featured a presentation by BVMF on its current strategic partnerships with CME Group and Nasdaq OMX.

Carbon Efficient Index

BM&FBOVESPA will receive until March 31st comments and suggestions to improve the development of the calculation methodology of the new Carbon Efficient Index (ICO2). The creation of the new index was announced on December 15th, 2009, by the Exchange and the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES), during the 15th United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP15), in Copenhagen.

Volumes and trades by Direct Market Access (DMA)

In February, derivatives market segment registered a total of 12,537,023 contracts traded via DMA*, with 1,485,032 trades carried out through the GTS trading platform. In January, the total was 9,917,768 contracts traded in 1,203,321 trades. In February, trading via DMA (including all DMA modalities) registered increases both in number of trades and contracts traded, establishing the following records: (1) a daily average of 696,501 contracts traded, compared to the previous record of 497,049 in October 2009; (2) the daily average of orders routed via the CME Globex – BM&FBOVESPA GTS reached 176,216 contracts, compared to the prior mark of 154,600 in October 2009.

Traditional DMA – 5,807,581 contracts traded, in 505,698 trades, in comparison to 4,590,025 contracts traded and 446,674 trades;

Via DMA Provider – 3,200,086 contracts traded, in 75,421 trades, in comparison to 2,723,958 contracts traded and 61,019 trades;

DMA via order routing with Globex (CME Group’s electronic trading platform) – 3,171,892 contracts traded, in 816,205 trades, in comparison to 2,284,904 contracts and 618,746 trades;

DMA via co-location – 357,464 contracts traded, in 87,708 trades, in comparison to 318,881 contracts traded, in 76,882 trades.

BM&FBOVESPA market performance – February 2010

BM&F Segment

Derivatives markets in the BM&F segment totaled 39,306,238 contracts and BRL 2.47 trillion in volume in February. That compares to 36,217,359 contracts and a volume of BRL 2.65 trillion in January. The daily average of contracts traded in the derivatives markets set a new record in February, with 2,183,679 contracts, in contrast to the previous record of 2,172,046 in March 2008.

Bovespa Segment

In February, equity markets (Bovespa segment) reached a total volume of BRL 118.06 billion, in 7,355,993 trades, with daily averages of BRL 6.55 billion and 408,666 trades, respectively. In January, total volume reached BRL 129.10 billion, 8,051,640 trades, with daily averages of BRL 6.79 billion and 423,771 trades, respectively.

Source: BM&FBOVESPA, 26.03.2010

Filed under: BM&FBOVESPA, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Exchanges, Latin America, Mexico, News, Peru, Risk Management, Trading Technology, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Chinas growing worries

China is in the midst of “the greatest bubble in history,”
March 17 (Bloomberg) –The Chinese central bank’s balance sheet resembles that of a hedge fund buying dollars and short-selling the yuan, said Rickards, now the senior managing director for market intelligence at McLean, Virginia-based consulting firm Omnis Inc.

“As I see it, it is the greatest bubble in history with the most massive misallocation of wealth,” Rickards said at the Asset Allocation Summit Asia 2010 organized by Terrapinn Pte in Hong Kong yesterday. China “is a bubble waiting to burst.”
Rickards joins hedge fund manager Jim Chanos, Gloom, Boom & Doom publisher Marc Faber and Harvard University professor Kenneth Rogoff in warning of an overheating and potential crash in China’s economy following a rally in stocks and property prices. The government has raised lenders’ reserve requirements twice this year to cool an economy that grew at the fastest pace since 2007 in the fourth quarter.

Leveraged speculation in the stock market, wasteful allocation of resources by state-owned enterprises, off-balance- sheet debt through regional governments and the country’s human rights record are concerns, said Rickards, who worked for LTCM between 1994 and 1999, helping negotiate a $3.6 billion rescue after the hedge fund lost $4 billion in a few weeks in 1998.

“Take Russia and China together, neither of them is really deserving any investment” except for short-term speculation, Rickards said. India and Brazil are two of the “real economies” among the developing countries, he said.

U.S. Treasuries
Rickards also disputed an argument that China could hold U.S. policies hostage through its U.S. Treasury securities holdings. The Asian nation remained the largest overseas owner of the debt after trimming its holdings by $5.8 billion in January to $889 billion, according to Treasury Department data released March 15.

China would suffer massive losses if the debt was dumped, reducing the funds available in the U.S. securities market and forcing the prices lower, he said. The U.S. president also has the authority, rarely used, to freeze such positions, he said.
Harvard’s Rogoff said Feb. 23 that a debt-fueled bubble in China may trigger a regional recession within a decade, while Chanos, founder of New York-based Kynikos Associates Ltd., predicted a slump after excessive property investments.
To contact the reporter on this story: Bei Hu in Hong Kong at bhu5@bloomberg.net.

March 18 (Bloomberg) — Chinese companies owned by the central government should speed up plans to pull out of property development if it doesn’t form part of their main business, their watchdog said today amid complaints that private real- estate groups are being squeezed out of the market.

PEs preferring China, India for investments in 2010
The survey noted that distressed private equity and small to mid-market buyout funds continue to attract a significant degree of investor interest, with 35 per cent and 36 per cent of respondents citing these as areas of the market that present the best current opportunities respectively.
Economics Inside China bubbling, NPL rising and local government fiscal insolvency are clearly increasing. Though still under debate, macro tightening (monetary policy and property) has begun
China’s 8,000 Credit Risks
Beijing’s stimulus has spawned thousands of special government investment funds holding billions of dollars in off-balance-sheet debt.

As the world struggles to recover from the most severe economic slowdown in a generation, China seemingly has accomplished a miracle. Growth registered at almost 9% last year, yet the government debt-to-GDP ratio still stood around a modest 20% as of December 31. Has China enjoyed the proverbial free lunch?

Far from it: The Chinese government has financed much of an enormous stimulus package through thousands of investment entities created by local governments. If Beijing doesn’t soon recognize this problem and put a stop to it, banks in China, which have provided the bulk of the funding, may soon face …

Source: SinoRock, 18.03.2010

Filed under: Asia, China, News, Risk Management, , , , , , , , , , , ,

CSRC outlines how funds can invest in CSI 300 futures

The regulator releases an early draft of the proposed rules for Chinese mutual funds that want to invest in CSI 300 index futures.

s fund analysts and managers continue to attend futures training courses organised by the China Securities Regulatory Commission, a draft of the CSRC’s proposed rules on how Chinese mutual funds can invest in the upcoming CSI 300 index futures hit the industry’s email inboxes earlier this week.

The regulator is encouraging discussion in the industry; it wants the public to provide feedback on the rules by this coming Monday, March 22.

A first glance through the five-page draft seen by AsianInvestor suggests the rules look straightforward, and its broad strokes read largely the same — both in language and spirit — to the rules for futures investing by fund managers in Taiwan. (This doesn’t come as a surprise; the regulations governing mutual-fund investments in securities, which went into effect in China in 2004, were also modelled after those in Taiwan.)

In the draft, the CSRC does not go into detail on how managers will qualify for futures-investing status. Fund houses, instead, are advised to review their fund prospectuses and contracts agreed with investors back at the fundraising stage and decide for themselves whether futures investing would meet their initial investment objective and risk exposure level as promised to investors.

For the fund industry, use of futures for the purpose of return enhancement is not permitted. The CSRC says the purpose of any fund activities in the futures market should be risk management.

The futures instruments for fund investment must be approved by and listed on China’s securities exchanges, and based on indices tracking only equity prices. (So notions of funds participating in bond futures or pretty much any other type of derivative would be futile at this stage.)

There are 559 mutual funds known to exist in China, according to the latest fund-registrar data tracking numbers published at the end of January. A quick search using the word ‘futures’ in Chinese in a fund database yields only 29 hits, in which ‘futures’ are specifically mentioned in the fund contracts or prospectuses as acceptable instruments for use by these funds.

Should these managers be willing to take up the challenge, they will theoretically be the initial 29 participants able to actually short A-shares domestically in China. (And there are 11 onshore brokerages authorised to serve them.)

Equity funds, balanced funds and principal-protected funds appear largely free to allocate to the CSRC’s approved list of futures instruments. The regulator thus far has made no mention on what it intends to do about segregated accounts and multi-client segregated-accounts, which went live in 2008 and 2009 respectively.

There will be limits on the holdings of futures by close-ended funds, open-ended index funds and exchange-traded funds. At the end of any given trading day, total value of securities held plus futures may not exceed 100% of a fund’s NAV — in short, leverage will not be permitted for these funds.

For open-ended funds, managers will be allowed to hold futures with a total outstanding value that exceeds 10% of the fund’s daily AUM at market closing. Net turnover of equity futures trading in a fund cannot exceed 20% of a fund’s NAV.

At the end of any given trading day, the total value of futures positions plus the value of the securities held in an open-ended fund may not exceed 95% of the fund’s NAV — with ‘securities’ defined as equities, bonds, options, asset-backed securities and repo instruments. Five percent of the fund’s assets must be allocated to liquidity instruments with maturities no longer than the equivalent of one-year government bonds.

Mindful that the funds industry at large is still poring over lecture notes and textbooks this month and that most firms have not yet hired the required techies for back-end support, the CSRC is advising caution and proper understanding; all participants should be adequately prepared before they enter the futures market. The CSRC wants fund houses to set up specific departments covering futures strategies and investments.

Other stakeholders, including guarantors to the ‘principal-protected’ funds (China’s version of CPPIs), are advised to get actively involved and aware of the potential value-at-risk for the funds they have given guarantee to; and that there should be sufficient assets to cover the principal-protected funds promised to investors should any potential losses occur.

Custodian banks are advised to review their own adequacy and strategies accordingly and develop risk-management and technological teams and platforms to support this development.

In earlier interviews with AsianInvestor, fund-rating agencies, including Morningstar and Lipper, have already taken a dim view of the opening moves that mutual fund houses will be able to make. Aside from the anticipated volatility to come, both predict a conservative and difficult early period, in which fund houses will be constrained by a lack of experienced staff and technical knowledge to draw on — for what is supposedly one of the most important chapters in the recent history of capital-market developments in China.

Nonetheless, for now, unregulated private funds, foreign investors with access to A-share markets and high-net-worth clients, and the 11 brokerages authorised to trade futures, are expected to be the largest beneficiaries.

For foreign players, though, CSI 300 futures will just be something to add to the toolbox. Overseas funds have long been able to express their views on A-shares using FTSE Xinhua A50 futures available in Hong Kong or Singapore.

Source:AsianInvestor.net, 18.03.2010 by By Liz Mak

Filed under: China, Exchanges, News, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

China: Governor of the Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) Geng corrects three Misunderstandings on International Board

Geng Liang, member of the CPPCC National Committee and Governor of the Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE), clarified ambiguous and incorrect assumptions in development of International Board in Beijing yesterday.

According to Geng, the introduction of International Board would benefit both the development of domestic capital market and the building of Shanghai into an international financial hub and would by no means reduce itself into a global ATM machine as some concerned.

Three Major Positive Effects of Int’l Board

“The decision of listing eligible overseas companies on domestic market, or introducing International Board, is made based on the consensuses reached through the Sino-US strategic economic dialogues and Sino-UK economic and trade dialogues. For China’s capital market, the launch of International Board will bring about benefits in three aspects,” said Geng. First of all, the launch of International Board, a milestone in China’s opening-up of its capital market, offers domestic investors a new channel to purchase shares of large overseas companies with RMB, which is by all means a progress.

Relevant insiders also hold that the opening of International Board is especially conducive to the investment in overseas enterprises by investors who are inexperienced in overseas investment and unfamiliar with foreign law and accounting systems.

Besides, the development of International Board will exert positive influence on the construction of blue-chip market, thus promoting the growth of China’s capital market. “The ultimate goal of the SSE is to build a blue-chip market, which includes high-quality Chinese and foreign listed companies,” added Geng.

Finally, International Board means a lot to building Shanghai into a global financial center. “The listing of overseas companies on domestic market will help pool human resources, capital and institutions to Shanghai,” noted Geng.

No Possibility for “Int’l ATM machine”

As to the concern about misusing International Board as “a global ATM machine”, Geng explained that under the arrangement that free exchange is forbidden under the RMB capital account, the A shares on the future International Board can’t be exchanged freely with the shares issued overseas. Thus, there is no possibility for “a global ATM machine”. Furthermore, “the large international companies, who apply for going listed on the SSE, have already got listed on overseas stock exchanges. Their listing on Chinese market is actually a behavior of refinancing. According to internationally accepted practices, the prices for refinancing generally shouldn’t exceed those on local secondary market.” Therefore, it is not qualified to be “a withdrawing behavior” in terms of scale.

Geng also stated that the launch of International Board would not impact Hong Kong’s position as an international financial center. “The support to Hong Kong market instead of affecting its construction of international financial hub by the return of H shares to A shares is a case in point. During the 20 years’ development of China’s capital market, 60 domestic enterprises went listed in Hong Kong, which vividly proved that the development of domestic capital market boosted Hong Kong market and exchange.”

Substantial Benefits of Int’l Board

Insiders hold that the benefits of initiating International Board are substantial. Apart from those mentioned by Geng, there are at least five more major benefits.

First, the new board will relieve the pressure from foreign exchange reserve, which accords with the development transition of national economy from capital attraction to technical, managerial and human resources introduction. Second, the new board will attract overseas natural resources and energy enterprises to get listed in China, thus helping break their capital barrier towards China’s capital by counteracting the increase in international commodity prices with equity income. Third, the new board provides a channel for Chinese investors to share the income from business conducted by multinational companies in China while changing the situation that multinational companies can only offer job opportunities to Chinese. Fourth, the corporate governance of domestic listed companies will be improved thanks to the model effect of overseas companies listed in China. Last but not least, the new board will help multinational companies integrate themselves with China’ economy to make greater contribution to the development of China’s economy.

Source: MondoVisione, 11.03.2010

Filed under: China, Exchanges, News, , , , , , ,

China’s QDII ETFs … taken with a pinch of salt

Despite the fanfare from QDII ETF issuers and the Shanghai Stock Exchange, these products are unlikely to achieve the lofty aims set for them.

If Shanghai Stock Exchange’s general manager, Zhang Yujun, is to be believed, China’s new generation of exchange-traded funds under the qualified domestic institutional investor (QDII) scheme will be ready for launch shortly.

The Shanghai bourse is keen to put its hotly anticipated products onto the market as soon as possible. It has marked 2010 down as a year of innovation, with the number of domestic and overseas ETF launches potentially hitting 10 for this year.

But it’s not the domestic ETFs that industry execs in Shanghai or around the region are buzzing about, but the overseas ETFs the SSE is championing. Market players are wondering what the developments will mean for the QDII market and what China’s fund flows in the region will look like after these products are made available.

The names now lining up in the QDII ETF pipeline include: China Southern, with its planned launch of a S&P 500 tracker; Beijing-based China Asset Management, which is going with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index; Harvest Fund Management, the new proud owner of Deutsche Asset Management’s Asian investment platform, using the Dow Jones Industrial Average; Shanghai’s Fortune SGAM, which will soon see its foreign stake transferred to Société Générale’s alternatives arm, Lyxor, and whose ETF tracks the Topix Core 30; not to mention Huaan’s newly announced initiative to track the FTSE 100.

In one fell swoop, the SSE is making available assets from around the world. Investors in China, at the click of a trade, will be able to access asset classes from US and UK equities to regional Asian exposures and Hong Kong and Japanese stocks.

(The list above does not cover Guotai Fund Management, one of the earliest Chinese houses wanting to license an index for an overseas ETF, which recently realised it will not attract enough liquidity for a niche index such as the Nasdaq 100. It is now quietly calling its product an “index-tracking fund”, instead of an ETF. Nor does the list include Penghua Fund, whose high-profile announcement of its supposed deal to have contracted three MSCI Barra indices was never confirmed by MSCI.)

Zhang says the Shanghai bourse wants to play its part in ‘standardising’ asset management. Index-based products are easily understood by investors, and through the standardisation process, the SSE believes it will bring transparency and even discourage moral hazards among asset managers.

Better yet, since trading and management fees for ETF instruments are traditionally the lowest for products globally, the introduction of ETF competition into the Chinese market should help bring down the high fees usually seen in the active management sector. And the way Zhang sees it, passive and index-based investments will eventually outperform.

Yet all these laudable ambitions should be taken with a pinch of salt. Far from having developed ETFs that come up to expectations, the SSE’s versions of these products and the underlying mechanism are hardly on a par with developed-market ETFs.

In particular, sources say the SSE boss’s comments are meant for domestic consumption — the exchange has been publicly pressuring the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) into approving the ETF launches, which were planned to have happened as early as November last year.

Why the regulatory hesitation? The CSRC was an early champion of introducing more liquid and transparent ETFs to China. But the SSE has not resolved the multiple technical barriers limiting the listing of an efficient overseas product in the country, as is revealed by an early blueprint for the Harvest Dow tracker jointly designed by Harvest and the SSE, and made public by the exchange. The SSE has made compromises in the design and the trading mechanisms of these supposed ETFs.

Amid the fanfare created by the issuing fund houses and even the SSE itself, one key point appears to be overlooked. The unspoken truth is that since the bourse has failed to tackle the underlying issues, the planned ETFs could only trade on exchanges as closed-end funds and would largely fail to deliver the many benefits normally expected of genuine ETFs.

These products will face challenges from day one, including: time differences in settlement cycles between the SSE and the exchange of the underlying index’s traded market; the lag in trading hours between China and underlying securities; the limitations of China’s lack of market-making mechanisms, and its reliance on its unique arbitrage mechanisms for levelling ETF traded prices and net asset values; and China’s foreign exchange restrictions, which currently only allow for monthly repatriation of capital. All of which the SSE has acknowledged in its white paper on ETFs that is available to the public.

Bound by these limitations, these products will not be able, for example, to perform continuous creation of units like normal ETFs, unlike even the very same strategies traded in Hong Kong. The NAVs will be largely static during the trading hours in China, though the ETF prices will be subject to supply-demand swings. (Hong Kong’s platform is backed by market-makers, unlike Shanghai’s, which is highly sensitive to liquidity and the level of trading among arbitrageurs on underlying strategies.)

The question then becomes: will China ever attract enough interest among arbitrageurs to trade on these faraway markets without real-time information? After all, when China trades, the US and the UK markets will be largely closed. Even for markets that sit in Asian time zones and close at hours overlapping China’s, there will be time differences on the settlement cycles. Arbitrageurs, therefore, will have to trade by assuming and incurring all risks themselves.

For example, a Ping An Hong Kong subsidiary doesn’t trade on the books of Ping An’s mainland entity. Legal status still withstanding, they are very different entities. One unit south of the border going short, cannot be reconciled from an accounting perspective by a separate unit going long north of the border. So, from where and how will these arbitrageurs emerge?

Because of the many compromises the Shanghai bourse has made to fit QDII ETFs into the existing — but highly unique — domestic ETF mechanism, the forthcoming international instruments can largely only be ETFs in name but not substance. An even better way to understand them is actually to see them as the equivalent of ‘listed open funds’ or ‘Lofs’ — products peculiar to China.

Ultimately, QDII ETFs are no different from closed-end funds — so why the current fuss over them? Sources close to the Shanghai bourse’s advisory panel say there’s really no reason for it — they are just another group of products to add to China’s well stocked shelf.

Nonetheless, they offer a slightly better alternative to the many internally managed and largely cost-return-inefficient QDII active funds now available in the market. And the idea of ETFs from a marketing perspective will no doubt catch on.

But even the mere illusion of innovation in the QDII market may be a false dawn. Both active and passive QDII managers will continue to be plagued by domestic expectations of further renminbi appreciation and by the bad reputation of the first generation of QDII products still freshly and firmly fixed in the minds of Chinese investors.

To wit, E-fund — the second biggest Chinese fund house, no less — kicked off the year with a fundraising attempt of just $86.6 million for its first QDII product.

Source: AsianInvestors.net, 10.03.2010 by Liz Mak

Filed under: Asia, China, Exchanges, Hong Kong, Japan, News, , , , , , , , ,

CME Group, Bolsa Mexicana de Valores and MexDer Announce Order Routing, Equity Agreement

In connection with yesterday’s announcement made by CME Group concerning the order routing agreement it has entered into with the Mexican Stock Market (BMV) and the 1.9 percent acquisition of BMV’s capital, BM&FBOVESPA and CME Group announce that they will initiate discussions about said transaction and other commercial opportunities with BMV, in consonance with the terms of the global strategic partnership published in the material fact dated February 11, 2010.

Source: MondoVisione, 09.03.2010

CME Group, the world’s leading and most diverse derivatives marketplace, and the Bolsa Mexicana de Valores, S.A.B. de C.V. (BMV), the financial exchange operator in Mexico, today announced that they have entered into a strategic partnership that includes an order routing agreement for derivatives products. CME Group has purchased shares in the Mexican exchange valued at $17 million, or approximately 1.9 percent of outstanding BMV shares, as part of the equity portion of the agreement. Additionally, the Control Trust of BMV has granted CME Group the right to nominate a member to BMV Board of Directors and the two exchange operators have signed a memorandum of understanding covering activities aimed at enhancing the partnership between the two exchanges.

Mexico’s MexDer seeks high class global partners, 08.11.2009

BMV Bolsa Mexicana de Valore: Information on relationships and discussions with CME, 27.09.2009

Through the agreement, CME Group will become the exclusive exchange provider of derivatives order routing services to BMV outside Latin America, and BMV will be the exclusive exchange provider of derivatives order routing services to CME Group in Mexico. BMV’s derivative products are offered through its derivatives subsidiary, MexDer.

CME Group and BMV have also agreed to pursue potential joint initiatives including product development, marketing and customer education as well as clearing opportunities. Additionally, BMV, CME Group and its Global Preferred Strategic Partner BM&FBOVESPA will initiate discussions about the aforementioned transaction and other commercial opportunities.

“Latin America is a key market for CME Group,” said Terry Duffy, CME Group Executive Chairman. “We are pleased to announce this new partnership with BMV which furthers our global strategy to offer customers increased access to our products while, at the same time, allowing BMV to use the CME Globex trading network to increase distribution of their products in North America.”

“With Mexico’s standing as the 13th largest economy and one of our country’s most significant trading partners, we are pleased to work with BMV to facilitate global hedging and risk management activity in our respective markets,” said Craig Donohue, CME Group Chief Executive Officer. “In addition to providing CME Group customers with our own highly liquid products in interest rates, equities, foreign exchange, commodities, energy and metals, the order routing agreement announced today will soon broaden efficient access on or through our CME Globex electronic trading platform to financial markets in Brazil, Mexico, South Korea, Dubai and Malaysia.”

“With this operation BMV increases its presence in the international markets. Greater distribution capabilities are a key part of our strategy to attract more investors to Mexico,” said Luis Tellez BMV Executive Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. “Allowing international investors an easier access into MexDer will improve liquidity and develop the local market. At the same time this agreement will provide Mexican investors with more tools to manage their portfolios.”

The order routing arrangement, which is scheduled to begin in 2011, will give BMV customers access to CME Group’s benchmark derivatives contracts including interest rates, foreign currencies, equity indexes, energy, metals and agricultural commodities. It will also give CME Group customers access to BMV’s interest rate and equity index derivatives.

Source: MondoVisione, 08.03.2009

Filed under: BM&FBOVESPA, BMV - Mexico, Exchanges, Latin America, Mexico, News, Risk Management, Trading Technology, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

ETF: BlackRock ETF Industry Review Latin America Industry Review – Year End 2009

BlackRock has just published its Latin America Industry Review Year End 2009 report. This report is a review of the Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) and Exchange Traded Products (ETPs) listed globally.

At the end of 2009 the Latin American ETF industry had 17 locally domiciled ETFs, 211 exchange listings, and assets of US$9.84 Bn from three providers on two exchanges.

There are 169 ETFs cross listed in Mexico at the end of December 2009 from eight providers, while there are 340 ETFs registered for sale in Chile from 10 providers, and 277 ETFs registered for sale in Peru from 12 providers.

Read full report of BlackRock_ETF_Latin_America_Review_2009

Source:MondoVisione, 05.03.2010

Filed under: Argentina, BM&FBOVESPA, BMV - Mexico, Brazil, Central America, Chile, Colombia, Exchanges, Latin America, Mexico, News, Peru, Services, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Brazil: Up but volatile – March 2010- IXE-BANIF Monthly Analysis

Strong domestic economy

The debate in developed nations is about the health of their public finance and how this will affect growth in the future. In Brazil the concern is the same, but it is at a different stage. While in some developed countries the debt is at its record high and government deficits are reaching worrying levels, in Brazil public accounts indicate deterioration, but for now they are only clouds in the horizon in a scenario of blue skies for this year and the next. The Brazilian economy is overheated especially in some sectors, and given the low level of past investment, inflation has become an issue (to be resolved in the coming months). In this scenario of a fragile world economic recovery, Brazil and China are clearly trying to avoid bubbles as past stimulus measures were successful. We remain bullish about equities in Brazil, particularly domestic plays, despite knowing that the government will take measures to slow the economic growth. With this in mind we foresee Brazilian stocks moving higher, but not without some volatility.

Ibovespa is a bad indicator

Although we set Ibovespa as the benchmark for this suggested Allocation, we acknowledge it may not be the most adequate index to reflect the Brazilian stock market at the moment. Heavyweight Petrobras has been underperforming the Ibovespa since the government announced the intention to make a capital injection last year. It could reach as much as US$50bn and depending on terms dilutive to minority shareholders. We might be close to have this uncertainty ended and Petrobras could finally trade again based on its fundamentals. Vale, another heavyweight, has also dragged the Ibovespa down this year. Despite an expected increase in prices of iron ore, we feel investors are somewhat skeptical that the world recovery is sustainable and therefore volumes could suffer in the medium term. We already heard of investors willing to swap Vale for Petrobras, but this might only start next month.

Interest rate: no changes in Brazil, US or Europe

COPOM in Brazil will take place on March 17, while the FOMC in US on the 16th and the ECB on the 04th. We believe the market is already factoring in a small interest rate hike in the next COPOM meeting. However, we do not expect any of them (ECB, FOMC or COPOM) to change interest rates in March. Inflation has been high lately in Brazil and at this pace it would lead to a level above the Central Bank’s target for the year (4.5% for 2010). Although the government will do anything at hand to delay an upward trend in interest rate, as recently raised the compulsory rate for bank deposits, we believe it cannot avoid raising the SELIC rate to two digits until YE, from the current 8.75%.

Read full report Brazil – Allocation – March 2010

Source: IXE, Banif, 01.03.2010

Filed under: BM&FBOVESPA, Brazil, Exchanges, Latin America, News, Risk Management, , , , , , , , , , , ,

Mexico: Economic recovery, but cautious stance – March 2010- IXE-BANIF Monthly Analysis

Risk aversion at international level should be the tone of the market, as seen last month. Investors should maintain their conservative stance, carefully cherry picking. While Mexico last month presented better than expected GDP figures for 2009 (down 6.5% YoY), inflation keeps trending up and interest rate should move higher, but we do not believe until 2H10 in a prudent and gradual pace.

We set our strategy for the suggested portfolio in March based on specific stock catalysts rather than on sector or top down view. We maintained a high weight on America Movil (AMXL) and GMexico (20% each) and included Autlan and Mexichem. AMXL is still underperforming the IPC and it has been showing a weak performance since it announced the corporate restructuring process involving CGT and TII. We believe the key short term catalyst is the disclosure of details and amount of synergies with this deal. GMexico was strong last month and we expect the uptrend to continue this month. We expect Autlan to present very good sales performance and prices should pick up, given the steel sector recovery worldwide. As for Mexichem, we expect margins to improve as it is entering the chlorine market. See more details of each stock catalyst and risks on pages 02 and 03.

Revising our GDP growth estimate to 4.1%, from 2.9%

After the release of better than expected GDP figures for 2009, despite a contraction of 6.5% YoY, we revised our estimates for 2010 upwards. We now project a GDP growth of 4.1% for Mexico in 2010, versus our previous forecast of 2.9%. We expect improvement from exports, especially services and we highlight the stronger than expected recovery in 4Q09, on a quarterly basis.

Inflation & interest rates to trend up

While annual inflation already suggests it is time to start implementing a more severe monetary policy, we believe the Central Bank will only change interest rates if there are concrete signs that the output gap is closing and idle capacity is close to historical highs. Inflation has been affected by local prices of fuel, electricity and public transportation; hence higher interest rates would not be efficient to bring it down towards the yearend goal. While the market consensus point to a hike already in July/10, we see a more gradual and prudent pace starting at a later time.  We do not anticipate higher interest rates on the meeting on March 19. We believe it should remain at 4.50% this time, but increase to 5.50% until yearend.

Read full report Mexico – Monthly Allocation – March10

Source: IXE, Banif, 01.03.2010

Filed under: BMV - Mexico, Exchanges, Latin America, Mexico, News, Risk Management, , , , , , , , , , , ,

BMV Mexican Stock Exchange’s Market Performance Report January 2010

Click here to download  SE_BMV Mexican Stock Exchange’s market performance report for January 2010

Source: BMV , 26.02.2010

FiNETIK recommends:

BMV- Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – December 2009 Performance Report

BMV- Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – November 2009 Performance Report

BMV- Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – October 2009 Performance Report

BMV- Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – September 2009 Performance Report

BMV- Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – August 2009 Performance Report

BMV- Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – July 2009 Performance Report

BMV – Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – June 2009 Performance Report

BMV – Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – May 2009 Performance Report

BMV – Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – April 2009 Performance Report

BMV – Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – March 2009 Performance Report

BMV – Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – February 2009 Performance Report

BMV – Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – January 2009 Performance Report

BMV – Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – December 2008 Performance Report

BMV -  Bolsa Mexicana de Valores – November 2008 Performance Report

Filed under: BMV - Mexico, Exchanges, Latin America, Mexico, News, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

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