View Full Version : Cambodia Commodities Exchange News


AsianDragons
July 7th, 2010, 12:48 PM
Commodities exchange counting down to July 30
Wednesday, 07 July 2010 15:01 Catherine James

CAMBODIA’S first commodities exchange, which will regulate and monitor the price of gold, oil, cotton and other goods, is set to launch at the end of this month, its chief operating officer has told the Post.

An opening ceremony for the Cambodian Mercantile Exchange will be held in Phnom Penh on July 30, hosting guest speaker Sir Richard Kapsch, the ex-governor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, one of the world’s largest commodities exchanges.

Kushal Kumar Shrestha, CMEX chief operating officer, said interest in the exchange had been growing since its opening was first flagged in March, but that the concept was still a new one for the Kingdom.

It will “take some time ... possibly a few years” before Cambodia’s commodities exchange is a fully fledged operation, Shrestha said yesterday.

Initially, 11 commodities will be tradable on the exchange – gold, silver, cotton, crude oil, heating oil, natural gas, soya-bean oil, soya bean, wheat, copper and coffee – as there is already an existing international market trading these commodities and tracking supply and demand.

Plans call for more local produce to be added as CMEX conducts further analysis, or “price discovery”, on the local market.

Shrestha said that setting market prices for commodities would benefit “everyone”.

“Price discovery of commodities is very important for the importers, exporters, growers, buyers, sellers: for everyone. Directly and indirectly – it will help them,” he said.

Benefits, he said, would come from setting a publicly available “fair” price on which trades could be made and future risk calculated.

CMEX is solely backed by two investors who have set up similar exchanges in their home country of India, as well as Nepal, Kenya and Sri Lanka.
The company plans to focus first on building awareness of the exchange in cities, beginning with Phnom Penh, and later expand to reach farmers in the provinces.

Shrestha said he believed the exchange was a step towards a stronger economy.

“For the economy to grow we need a stock exchange, we need a commodities exchange, we need a futures market, the derivative market. They play a very important role in the growth of the economy in every nation,” he said.

Officials at the long-anticipated Cambodian stock exchange, set to be launched later this year, seem to agree.

The Securities Exchange Commission of Cambodia has been in close discussions with CMEX, as it would ultimately set regulatory policies for both exchanges to operate under.

An SECC delegation including Deputy Director General Kao Thach and Director Chan Narith was now in Nepal to see an operational commodities exchange at work and draw from the Nepalese government experience in regulation, Shrestha said.

The delegation is expected to visit the Nepalese ministry of finance today, and will later meet the security board of Nepal.

Shrestha said CMEX hoped to have licensed up to half a dozen brokers once the exchange went live in mid-August, and had been calling for “entrepreneurs” to apply.

“The experience they need [as a broker] is minimal as CMEX will itself provide the training,” Shrestha said.

Acleda Bank was “70 percent” likely to become the exchange’s banking partner, Shrestha said, but the bank yesterday declined to comment until more was known.

The Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries declined to comment on how the exchange might impact upon farmers. An official said that not enough was understood about how the operation was going to work

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/index.php/2010070740312/Business/commodities-exchange-counting-down-to-july-30.html

SeeMacau
October 22nd, 2010, 10:01 AM
Cambodia commodity exchange remains shelved

Published on: October 20, 2010 at 13:00

PHNOM PHEN (Commodity Online) : More than three months after its scheduled opening date, Cambodia’s only commodity exchange remained shelved as authorities failed to draft regulations to govern the exchange.

The privately-owned Cambodian Mercantile Exchange was due to launch on July 30 and begin online trading of 11 commodities by mid-August.

CMEX officials have repeatedly declined to comment on the reasons for the delay.

However, Securities and Exchange Commission of Cambodia (ECC) said the exchange could not open until the regulations to govern it were in place.

In a statement ECC said it asked the CMEX not to operate because we need the regulations to be set up first and they need to apply for the regulation.

Once regulations were created, it said, related ministries, such as the Ministry of Agriculture, would need to be consulted before a final draft was available.

Analysts said despite the apparent delay, the CMEX would have a positive impact once established.

“Cambodia has never had a commodities exchange before, and it’s getting by without it, but it would be good to have one at some time in the future as the agriculture market develops,” they said

A mercantile exchange helps to monitor and regulate the price of the goods being traded by setting a market price for goods based on broader supply and demand.

Commodity traders usually use futures contracts, which can help farmers because they can hedge the cost of their produce when they know the future price they will receive for their goods on delivery.

CMEX said in July that, initially, 11 commodities would be listed on the Kingdom's exchange.

These were gold, silver, cotton, crude oil, heating oil, natural gas, soya-bean oil, soya beans, wheat, copper and coffee.

AsianDragons
July 15th, 2011, 02:21 PM
mod do we really need this thread and its sticky cant we just merge it with the stock exchange news

SeeMacau
July 17th, 2011, 12:11 PM
This one is trading goods, the other one is trading shares .. two completely different stock exchange :)

mrfusion
July 17th, 2011, 03:17 PM
Isn't this suppose to be called Cambodian Mercantile Exchange

http://www.mexcambodia.com/index.asp

mrfusion
July 17th, 2011, 03:21 PM
Having a brief read about Commodity exchange, I think this will benefit Cambodia more then the Stock exchange, and surprise there wasn't one all these time.

AsianDragons
July 7th, 2012, 11:43 AM
the only news not for this thread is that petrols are down :bow:

AsianDragons
July 14th, 2012, 10:12 AM
rice is so expensive these days

mrfusion
July 15th, 2012, 04:07 PM
rice is so expensive these days

but farmers still got pay shit.