Skip to content

Bloomberg Markets: CME Tries Again to Make Three-Year Treasury Futures a Thing

The futures market has grown even faster because of the balance-sheet efficiencies it offers, Mirza said. Volume in Treasury futures has tripled since 2009, and open-interest has increased fourfold, he said. That’s driven an increase in demand for additional contracts investors can use to hedge risk at various points along the curve.

When the legacy three-year contract debuted in 2009, there were four Treasury contracts, for the two-, five- and 10-year notes and the 30-year bond. Now there are two more — the Ultra 10-year and the Ultra Bond, which reference longer-maturity baskets of deliverable securities than the “classic” versions.

Balance-sheet considerations that became more important after the financial crisis initially benefited the longer-term contracts most, Mirza said. In the past two years, however, the two- and five-year contracts have become CME’s fastest-growing Treasury products, he said.

The changes CME is making to the three-year contract, which will take effect July 13 pending regulatory review, are as follows:

  • Expanding its deliverable basket to include old seven-year notes — which the Treasury resumed issuing in 2009 after a 15-year hiatus. As a result, there will be 12 securities in the basket worth a combined $432 billion, up from eight worth a combined $319 billion. The larger size can support more growth in open interest, Mirza said.
  • Halving the minimum price increment for the contract to one-eighth of one-32nd of a price point, to match a change that was made to the two-year contract in January 2019. While the move drew grumbles from speculators who say it’s made the market less liquid, CME says it cut trading costs and increased usage of the contract relative to the other Treasury products.
  • The third change affects the contract’s trade matching algorithm on Globex, CME’s electronic platform.

Mirza said the revamped three-year contract is “a similar story” to what happened when CME tried more than once to introduce a contract similar to the Ultra 10-year before finally gaining traction with that product, whose open interest briefly topped 1 million this year.

Used with permission of Bloomberg L.P. Copyright©2020. All rights reserved.

Read original article: https://cattlemensharrison.com/bloomberg-markets-cme-tries-again-to-make-three-year-treasury-futures-a-thing/

By: CME Group

Posted in ,