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London Metal Exchange

 
Investment Dictionary: London Metal Exchange - LME

A commodities exchange in London, England, that deals in metal futures. Contracts on the exchange include aluminum, copper and zinc. Trading on the LME can be done in three main ways: through open outcry, a telephone system between member companies or the LME Select, an electronic trading platform. The LME is a non-ferrous exchange, which means that iron and steel are not traded on the exchange.

Investopedia Says:
The LME is one of the main metal markets in the world and allows for the hedging of metals risk through highly liquid and standardized exchange-traded futures contracts. The LME also trades plastics on its exchange and has an LME index option that allows traders to speculate or hedge the broader metals market as a whole.

Related Links:
For those who are new to futures but want a solid understanding of them, this tutorial explains what futures contracts are, how they work and why investors use them. Futures Fundamentals
There's one simple hurdle in the transition from stock to futures options: learning about product specifications. Becoming Fluent in Options on Futures


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Financial & Investment Dictionary: London Metal Exchange (LME)
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Principal-to-principal market for base metals trading established in 1877. LME prices are used as reference prices in many world markets by metals producers and fabricators of metal products, and are the basis for most major commodity indices. LME contracts assume an eventual delivery of physical metal on the prompt date, but this generally does not occur, since the majority of LME business is for trade hedging LME trades cash and three-month contracts on aluminum, copper, nickel, lead, tin, zinc, aluminum alloy, and North American special aluminum alloy. Traded average price option (TAPOs) contracts are available for these metals. The London Metal Exchange Index (LMEX) is a base metals index comprised of the six nonferrous metals traded on the exchange designed for investors. In 2005, the LME launched the world's first futures contracts for plastics-polypropylene and linear low-density polyethylene, tradable across all platforms. The LME supports three trading platforms; Open Outcry on the "ring" (11:45 A.M.-5 P.M.), LME Select, the Exchange's electronic trading system (7 A.M.-7 P.M.), and 24 hours via telephone. In open outcry trading, contracts are traded in "rings"-a period of five minutes for each contract beginning at 11.45 A.M. After a break, the process is repeated. The second part of this session results in settlement and official prices, at or near 1:15 P.M. After official prices are announced, a period of trading called "the kerb" begins, with all contracts trading simultaneously. The second ring, or the afternoon session, begins at 3:20 P.M., following the structure of the first ring and ending with a 25-minute kerb period from 4:35 P.M. to 5 P.M. LME Select is the exchange's electronic trading platform, connecting 33 LME member firms.

Accredited traders can execute trades on the screen in addition to open outcry ring trading and the telephone market. All trades are covered by a matching system run by the LCH. Clearnet, which acts as a central counterpart to trades executed between clearing members of the exchange. www.lme.com.

Wikipedia: London Metal Exchange
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The London Metal Exchange or LME is the futures exchange with the world's largest market in options, and futures contracts on base and other metals. As the LME offers contracts with daily expiry dates of up to three months from trade date, along with longer-dated contracts, it also allows for cash trading. It offers hedging, worldwide reference pricing and the option of physical delivery to settle contracts.

It is located at 56 Leadenhall Street, London.

Contents

History

The London Metal Market and Exchange Company was founded in 1877, but the market traces its origins back to 1571 and the opening of the Royal Exchange. At first, only copper was traded, lead and zinc were soon added but only gained official trading status in 1920. The exchange was closed over WW II and did not re-open until 1952.[citation needed] Other metals traded extended to include aluminium (1978), nickel (1979), aluminium alloy (1992) and steel (2008). The exchange also started trading plastics in 2005. The total value of the trade is around $US 10.24 Trillion annually.[1]

Facilities

If you want to produce, or trade copper or tin, or whatever listed on the LME, you can sell the metal to one of the many big warehouses of the LME, all over the world, and receive a warrant. This is a way to share the cost of these warehouses between the many industry participants and make it more efficient, to compete against other products.

The LME issues, each day, detailed figures on how many tons of each metal is in its warehouses, which helps producers and consumers make correct business decisions.

Ring trading

Trading Times: 11:45 - 17:00, London Time

Open-outcry is the oldest and most popular way of trading on the Exchange. It is central to the process of ‘price discovery’, a term used to describe the way LME official prices are established. Prices are derived from the most liquid periods of trading; the short open-outcry ‘ring’ trading sessions, and are most representative of industry supply and demand. The official settlement price, on which contracts are settled, is determined by the last offer price before the bell is sounded to mark the end of the official ring.

Ring Dealing Members

Ring Dealing Members are entitled to trade in the Ring during the ring-trading sessions.[2] They may also operate a 24-hour market by trading inter-office. All Ring Dealing Members, as members of the London Clearing House, are authorised under the 2000 Financial Services and Markets Act, and are regulated by the Financial Services Authority.

Ring Dealing Members are Clearing Members, who hold the exclusive right to trade in the ring;

Markets

There is constant inter-office trading, but a lot of trading is still done by open-outcry in the Ring. There is a morning and an afternoon trade, where each of the eight metal contracts are traded in two blocks with a five-minute session for each contract (the sessions last from 11.45 until 13.15 and from 15.10 until 16.35, each session includes a 10-minute break). The second trading block in the morning is key to setting the Daily Official Exchange rates. After the official trades, there is 15 minutes of "kerb" trading. Trades are in futures, options and TAPOs (traded average-price options, a form of Asian option).

In addition to the 12 companies who have exclusive rights to trade in the Ring, around 100 companies are involved in the LME in total.

Contrary to popular belief, the precious metals, gold and silver, are not traded on the London Metal Exchange, but on the over-the-counter market usually referred to as the London Bullion Market, by the members of the London Bullion Market Association. Platinum and palladium are traded on the London Platinum and Palladium Market. Minor metals are not yet traded on the LME but the exchange announced that they will begin trading Cobalt and Molybdenum.[3] Many companies involved in minor metals are members of the Minor Metal Trade Association.

Electronic trading

The LME finally launched an electronic platform called LME Select.[4] This was developed by a Swedish software house called Cinnober. The platform is a FIX-based trading platform, and has a significant and increasing share of the total LME business.

See also

References

  1. ^ "LME achieves another year of record volume". London Metal Exchange. 5 January 2009. http://lme.com/6935.asp. Retrieved 29 July 2009. 
  2. ^ "Category 1 - Ring Dealing". London Metal Exchange. http://lme.com/membership_ringdealing.asp. Retrieved 29 July 2009. 
  3. ^ "LME to launch minor metals contracts in H2 2009". London Metal Exchange. 4 September 2009. http://lme.com/6241.asp. Retrieved 28 July 2009. 
  4. ^ "LME Select". London Metal Exchange. http://lme.com/who_how_select.asp. Retrieved 28 July 2009. 

External links

Coordinates: 51°30′47.5″N 0°4′45″W / 51.513194°N 0.07917°W / 51.513194; -0.07917


 
 

 

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