Iran Mercantile Exchange

Iran Mercantile Exchange
Type Commodities exchange
Location Tehran, Iran
Founded 2006[1]
Owner IME is 30% owned by individuals and 70% by legal and financial entities.[2]
Currency Iranian rial
Commodities Industrial products, agricultural products, petrochemicals[1]
Website http://www.ime.co.ir

Iran Mercantile Exchange (IME) is a commodities exchange located in Tehran, Iran. It was founded in 2006. IME trades in agricultural, industrial and petrochemical products in the spot and futures markets.[1][3] It is mainly a domestic or regional market with the ambition to become more international in the future.[2] As of 2014, about one fourth of IME's commodities were exported. IME offers a variety of services, including providing access to the initial offering of commodities, pricing for Iran’s Over-the-Counter (OTC), secondary markets and end users, providing a venue for government sales and procurement purchases, facilitating a trading platform and user interface, providing clearing & settlement services, risk management, technology services, and training of market participants.[4]


History

IME statistics (2007-2014)

Tehran Metal Exchange was established in September 2003 as the first mercantile exchange in the country. Later on, Iran Agricultural Exchange was established in September 2004. Subsequently, Tehran Metal Exchange merged with Iran Agricultural Exchange in December 2006 and formed the Iran Mercantile Exchange Company.[1] In 2015, trading at IME has for the first time surpassed the volume of trade at the Tehran Stock Exchange.[5]

Oil Bourse

Main article: Iranian Oil Bourse

The Government of Iran decided to establish the oil and petrochemicals exchange and the responsibility of creating this new exchange was delegated to IME Company. The first phase was launched on February 17, 2008 by executing the transactions of petrochemicals and chemicals which has been running successfully and the second phase is on the verge of launching. With the completion of the second phase, crude and by-products of oil can also be traded on the exchange in both Iranian Rial and major foreign currencies (except USD).

Kish Island is the venue for trading the oil contracts. It is a free trade zone. The Islamic Republic also wants to encourage local investors to participate in the oil market as it tries to reduce the state’s role in the country’s energy industry.[6]

Supervision and regulation

The Securities and Exchange Organization (SEO) is the sole regulatory entity for the regulation and development of the capital market in Iran.[7] In 2013 Iran Mercantile Exchange joined the Federation of Euro-Asian Stock Exchanges (FEAS) as a full member.[8] It is also a member of Association of Futures Markets (AFM).[9]

Products

Industrial

See also: Mining in Iran

Petroleum by-products

Iran holds the world's second largest oil reserves after Saudi Arabia, and the second-largest gas reserves after Russia.[2]

Petrochemicals

Agricultural

Tradable contracts

Trading system

Trading in IME is based on open outcry auction using electronic trading platform, an interaction of bids and offers made by the buying and selling brokers. Orders, already placed by the clients, are entered in the system by the brokers sitting behind their stations in the trading floor. The system processes the orders and executes the transaction upon matching of the bid and offer prices.[1]

IME Statistics

Source: Central Bank of Iran[11][12][13][14][15]
IME Exchange (Including spot, credit and forward transactions) 2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/111 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14
Agricultural - Volume (thousand tons) 273.0 173.5 175.21,633.9549.6 184.5 266.2
Agricultural - Value (billion rials) 772.6 3,729.7 484.83,729.73,792.8 1,346.5 2,748.5
Manufacturing and Metal - Volume (thousand tons) 6,443.8 6,679.7 7,438.58,694.011,685.8 13,172.0 13,555.2
Manufacturing and Metal - Value (billion rials) 58,044.2 62,120.6 53,842.075,235.5102,534.1 197,341 226,211.0
Oil and Petrochemical - Volume (thousand tons) 89.7 4,339.2 7,052.96,662.68,116.6 8,352.010,572.0
Oil and Petrochemical - Value (billion rials) 352.7 19,921.0 36,450.741,478.064,360.8 116,387.0199,113.0
Grand Total - Volume (thousand tons) 6,806.5 11,192.4 14,666.616,990.520,352.0 21,708.5 24,393.4
Grand Total - Value (billion rials) 59,169.4 82,685.3 90,777.5120,443.2170,687.7 315,074.5428,072.5

1 Due to the reclassification of "cement" under "manufacturing and mining products", figures for 2010/11 have been revised. Previously, "cement" was classified under "oil and petrochemical products".

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 http://www.ime.co.ir/site/487/default.aspx
  2. 1 2 3 Nasseri, Ladane (2008-05-27). "Iranian Exchange to Start Commodity Futures in July; Oil Later". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2010-08-27.
  3. http://www.turquoisepartners.com/iraninvestment/IIM-Dec09.pdf
  4. http://iran-daily.com/newspaper/page/4869/4/17052/0
  5. http://presstv.com/Detail/2015/02/18/398164/Iran-commodity-market-overtakes-TSE
  6. "Oil bourse next week". tehran times. Retrieved 2010-08-27.
  7. Archived July 22, 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  8. http://www.tehrantimes.com/economy-and-business/112879-iran-mercantile-exchange-gets-feas-membership
  9. http://presstv.com/Detail/2015/02/18/398164/Iran-commodity-market-overtakes-TSE
  10. Iran Mercantile Exchange Starts Fuel-Oil Trading in April. Payvand.com. Retrieved on 2013-10-29.
  11. http://www.cbi.ir/page/7575.aspx
  12. Central Bank of The Islamic Replic of Iran. Cbi.ir. Retrieved on 2013-10-29.
  13. http://www.cbi.ir/showitem/10605.aspx
  14. http://www.cbi.ir/page/11992.aspx
  15. http://www.cbi.ir/Newestdoc.aspx?id=0&dn=AnnualReview_en&dl=1

External links

Videos
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 31, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.