NZX, New Zealand's market operator, has taken another step towards expanding its dairy derivatives market into the US with approval to allow direct access for American customers.
NZX is now a registered Foreign Board of Trade under the US Commodity Exchange Act, allowing US investors' direct access to trade in New Zealand dairy derivatives. Whole milk powder options and futures, skim milk powder and anhydrous milk fat futures have traded on the NZX since October 2010.
New Zealand is the world's biggest dairy exporter, with exports of milk powder, butter and cheese climbing about 17 per cent to $13.4 billion last year. Trading of NZX dairy futures, though fast growing, is still relatively small, with 36,748 lots changing hands in 2013, up 52 per cent, and open interest positions as at Dec. 31 of 9,070, up 316 per cent.
"In the scheme of things it's doing very well," Kathryn Jaggard, NZX head of derivatives, told BusinessDesk. "It takes two, five, 10 years to become fully mature."
She said the market operator has "a five-year view" on getting to a level of good liquidity. "We are in a good position, currently around 200 lots a day. We'd certainly like to get 500 lots a day, and 1,000 in the future."