नेपालमा डेरिभेटिभ कारोबार र यसको सम्भावना

नेपालमा डेरिभेटिभ कारोबार र यसको सम्भावना

डेरिभेटिभ
डेरिभेटिभ भनेको सामान्य अर्थमा एउटा वित्तिय औजार हो जसको मुल्य आधार वस्तु तथा साधनको मुल्यमा निर्भर रहन्छ । यसको आफ्नै कुनै निहित मुल्य हुँदैन । अर्को शब्दमा भन्नु पर्दा यो एउटा करार हो जसमा दुई पक्षबिचमा भविष्यमा कुनै वस्तु लिन अथवा दिनका लागि वर्तमानमा नै सम्झौता हुने गर्दछ । तोकिएको मिति पुगेपछि यस्तो करार समाप्त हुन्छ र त्यो बेला किन्ने कबोल गरेको पक्षले बेच्ने कबोल गरेको पक्षलाई पहिले कबोल गरे अनुसारको मुल्य दिनुपर्दछ त्यसपश्चात् बेच्ने पक्षले पनि वस्तुको डेलिभरी तोकेको स्थानमा दिने कार्य गर्दछ र कारोबार सम्पन्न हुने गर्दछ । डेरिभेटिभ विभिन्न प्रकारको हुने गर्दछ फ्युचर फरवार्ड अप्सन र स्वाप आिद । हाल नेपालमा फ्युचर डेरिभेटिभको अधिकतम अभ्यास भइरहेको छ साथै हाल साचालनमा रहेको कारोबार प्रणाली अन्तर्गत सबै कारोबारहरु नगदमा राफसाफ हुने गर्दछ ।

डेरिभेटिभ एक्सचेन्ज
यसरी विभिन्न डेरिभेटिभ कन्ट्राक्ट करार हरुलाई आफ्नो कारोबार हुने वस्तुको सूचीमा सूचिकरण गरी कारोबार स्थल प्रदान गर्ने एक्सचेन्जहरुलाई डेरिभेटिभ एक्सचेन्ज भनिन्छ । यस्तो डेरिभेटिभ कन्ट्राक्ट कुनै पनि वस्तुको बनाएर कारोबार स्थल प्रदान गर्न गराउन सकिन्छ । हाल विश्वव्यापीरुपमा मुद्रा विदेशी मुद्रा स्टक; सेयर कमोडिटीज कृषि जन्य वस्तु धातु तथा उर्जाजन्य वस्तु आदिको डेरिभेटिभ कन्ट्राक्टहरु प्रचलित छन् ।

कमोडिटीज एक्सचेन्ज
उपभोग्य वस्तुहरु जस्तै गहुँ मकै कफि सुन चाँदी कच्चा तेल लगायतका वस्तुहरुको मुल्यमा हुने घटबढका आधारमा लगानीकर्ताहरुलाई मुनाफा सिर्जना गराउने तथा उत्पादकहरुलाई भविष्यमा हुने मुल्यको घटबढको जोखिम कम गर्ने उद्देश्यले विभिन्न उपभोग्य सामाग्रीहरुलाई सूचिकरण गरी कारोबार गराउने एक्चेन्जहरुलाई कमोडिटिज एक्सचेन्ज भन्ने गरिन्छ । नेपालको हकमा हालसम्म स्थापित सबै एक्सचेन्जहरुले कमोडिटिज अर्थात् यस अन्तर्गत पर्ने कृषिजन्य वस्तु धातुजन्य वस्तु तथा उर्जाजन्य वस्तुहरुको मात्रै कारोबार गर्दै आएका छन् ।

कमोडिटिज कारोबारको इतिहास
विभिन्न कमोडिटिलाई डेरिभेटिभ बनाएर कारोबार गर्ने तथा गराउने कार्यको इतिहास खोतल्दा सबैभन्दा सुरुमा प्राचिन समयका दार्शनिक थेल्स ९त्जबभिक० को नाम लिनु पर्ने हुन्छ । उनले तत्कालिन समयमा एक फाइना_िन्सयल डिभाइस को विकास गरेको पाइन्छ । जसबाट उनले उक्त समयमा जैतुनको भविष्यको मूल्य अनुमान गरी वर्तमानमा लगानी गर्दा मुनाफा आर्जन गरेको इतिहास पाइन्छ । यो कुरालाई दार्शनिक एरिस्टोटलले आफ्नो पुस्तक ‘Politics’ मा उल्लेख गरेका छन् ।
कमोडिटिज कारोबारको आधुनिक इतिहासमा पहिलो व्यवस्थित एक्सचेन्ज जापानको Dojima Rice Exchange लाई मानिन्छ । यो सन् १७१० मा स्थापना भएको हो । त्यस्तै अमेरिकामा सन् १८४८ मा स्थापना भएको Cichago Board of Trust लाई आधुनिक पहिलो फ्युचर एक्सचेन्ज मानिन्छ ।
हालको सबैभन्दा ठूलो मध्येको एक सिकागो मर्कन्टाइल एक्सचेन्ज सन् १९१९ मा स्थापना भएको हो ।
सन् १९७०को दशक तिर आएर मात्रै अन्य वित्तिय साधनहरुको डेरिभेटिभ कारोबार हुन सुरु गरेको हो । सँगै कम्प्युटर टेक्नोलोजीमा भएको विकासले यही दशकबाट यो कारोबारमा प्रत्यक्षरुपमा प्रभाव पार्न सुरु गरेको देखिन्छ । आज विश्वभर नै यो कारोबार पूर्णरुपमा अत्याधुनिक कम्प्युटरबाट स्वचालित रहेको छ र अन्तर्गतका सबै कारोबारहरु अनलाईनबाट नै सम्पन्न गर्ने गरिन्छ ।
नेपालमा डिसेम्बर १६ २००६ बाट कमोडिटिज एण्ड मेटल एक्सचेन्ज नेपाल कोमेन ले यो कारोबारको विधिवत सुरुवात गरेको हो ।

बजारमा संलग्न पक्षहरु
हरेक बजारमा संलग्न पक्षहरुको प्रत्यक्ष सहभागिताबाट बजार साचालन भएको हुन्छ । डेरिभेटिभ बजारमा पनि विभिन्न पक्षहरुको संलग्नताले बजार साचालनमा रहेको हुन्छ ।

एक्सचेन्ज - बजारको सबैभन्दा महत्वपूर्ण सहभागीको रुपमा एक्सचेन्ज रहेको हुन्छ । जसले बजारस्थल प्रदान गरेर कारोबार गर्ने गराउने कार्य गर्दछ । यसैगरी बजारमा संलग्न अन्य पक्षहरुलाई नियुक्त गर्ने तथा निस्कासन गर्ने कार्य पनि गर्दछ । छोटकरीमा भन्नुपर्दा यसले बजारलाई साचालन गरिरहेको हुन्छ ।

क्लियरिङ्ग सदस्य -बजारमा संलग्न खरिददार तथा बिक्रेताहरुलाई उनीहरुको कारोबारको क्लियरिङ्ग र सेटलमेन्ट सेवा प्रदान गर्नको लागि एक्सचेन्जले नियुक्त गरेकॊ सदस्य हो । यसलाई अर्को शब्दमा काउन्टरपार्टी समेत भनिन्छ । यसले लगानी गर्न चाहने सबैको डिपोजिट लिने र उनीहरुले माग गरेको बेला कमाएको नाफा दिने तथा डिपोजिट फिर्ता गर्ने कार्य गर्दछ ।

व्यापार सदस्य ब्रोकर - लगानी गर्न इच्छुक लगानीकर्ताहरुलाई यो बजारमा संलग्न गराउनको लागि एक्सचेन्जले नियुक्त गरेको सदस्य हो । यो सदस्यले आफ्ना लगानीकर्ता तथा सेवाग्राहीलाई बजारमा संलग्न गराउने तथा गराए पश्चात् बजारको सही सूचना विश्लेषण सेवा तथा अन्य आवश्यक सेवाहरु प्रदान गर्ने कार्य गर्दछन् र उनीहरुबाट हुने हरेक कारोबारमा कमिसन शुल्क लिने गर्दछन् ।

लगानीकर्ता - बजारस्थलमा सूचिकरण गरिएका वस्तुहरुको मुल्यमा हुने घटबढबाट भविष्यमा मुनाफा आर्जन गर्ने तथा जोखिम कम गर्ने उद्देश्यले लगानी गर्न इच्छुक व्यक्ति समुह वा संस्थालाई लगानीकर्ता भनिन्छ । यी लगानीकर्ताले कारोबारस्थल सम्म आइपुग्नका लागि एक्सचेन्जद्वारा नियुक्त गरिएको कुनै पनि व्यापार साझेदारको माध्यम हुँदै आउनु पर्छ । व्यापार सदस्यले प्रवाह गरेको विश्लेषण तथा बजार सूचना तथा आफैले गरेको विश्लेषणबाट बस्तुको मुल्य घट्छ कि बढ्छ भनि उनीहरुले यो बजारमा सूचिकरण गरिएको वस्तुको करारहरु किन्ने अथवा बेच्ने कार्य गर्दछन् ।
यसरी कुनै पनि वस्तुको करार किन्न अथवा बेच्नको लागि एक्सचेन्ज तथा क्लियरिङ्गले उक्त वस्तुका लागि तोकेको इनिसियल मार्जिन रकम क्लियरिङ्ग सदस्यसमक्ष जम्मा गर्नुपर्दछ । यसपछि उनीहरुले सो वस्तुको मुल्य विश्लेषण पश्चात् किन्ने तथा बेच्ने कार्य गर्न सक्दछन् । यसरी कारोवार गर्दा लगानीकर्ताले आफ्नो व्यापार सदस्यलाई कमिसन शुल्क तिर्नुपर्ने हुन्छ । यसरी कारोबार गर्दा सबै कार्यहरु अनलाईनबाटै सम्पन्न हुन्छ ।

सम्भावना र चूनौतिहरु
सेयरको मुल्यमा लगातार आएको गिरावट घरजग्गाको कारोबारमा लागेको बन्देज लगानीका अन्य क्षेत्रहरुमा आएको संकुचन राजनीतिक अस्थिरता तथा साचारमाध्यमहरुबाट भइरहेको सकारात्मक सूचना तथा समाचारको प्रचार प्रसारबाट पछिल्लो समयमा कमोडिटिजको डेरिभेटिभ कारोबार प्रति लगानीकर्ताहरुको उत्साह तथा चासो वृद्धि भएको देखिएको छ । भौतिक वस्तुको लेनदेन नहुने र नगदमै राफसाफ हुने कारोबार विश्लेषणको तरिका सेयरको जस्तै हुने न्यूनतम मार्जिन राखेर कारोबार गर्न पाइने वस्तु मुल्य घटबढ भइरहेको आफैंले हेर्न तथा विश्लेषण गर्न सकिने आफैंले कम्प्युटरमा बसेर किनबेच गर्न सकिने २४ सै घण्टा बजार साचालन हुने आफूले चाहेको मुल्यमा तत्काल किनबेच गर्न सकिने कमोडिटिजको मुल्यमा अत्याधिक परिवर्तन भइरहने जस्ता विशेषताका कारण पनि ब्रोकरहरुको निगरानीमा ब्रोकरहरुको माध्यमबाट मात्रै आफूले चाहेको र पाएको मूल्यमा किनबेच गर्न नपाइरहेका र थोरै मात्र परिवर्तनशील सेयरहरुमा लगानी गरिरहेका नेपाली लगानीकर्ताहरुका लागि डेरिभेटिभ कारोबार आफैंमा पनि एउटा सहज अनि सम्भावनायुक्त लगानी गर्ने क्षेत्रको रुपमा रहेको छ ।
पछिल्लो समयमा कमोडिटिजि एक्सचेन्जको नियमन व्यवस्थाको लागि गठित समितिले पेश गरेको मस्यौदा अनुसार नेपाल धितोपत्र बोर्डले नै कमोडिटिज एक्सचेन्जको नियमन गर्नु पर्ने्र प्रस्ताव तथा राष्ट्रबैंकले वाणिज्य बैंकहरुलाई पनि डेरिभेटिभ कारोबार गर्न दिएको छुटका कारण पनि लगानीकर्ता तथा यसमा संलग्न भएका तथा हुन चाहनेहरु सबैलाई थप मनोबल प्रदान गर्ने कार्य गरेको छ साथै लगानी गरिरहेका लगानीकर्ताहरुमा थप विश्वासको वातावरण सिर्जना गरेको छ । यसले पनि आउँदो दिनमा यसक्षेत्रमा हुन सक्ने लगानीको आंकलन गर्न सकिन्छ ।
यी सबै सम्भावनाहरुलाई थप आश्वस्त पार्न तथा कारोबार स्थल थप सुविधाजनक कम जोखिम युक्त र मुनाफा आर्जन गर्न सकिने एउटा विश्वासिलो क्षेत्र बनाउन नेपाल डेरिभेटिभ एक्सचेन्ज अहोरात्र लागी परेको छ ।
यी सबै सम्भावनाका बावजुद कारोबारलाई देशव्यापी बनाउन आवश्यक पर्ने कम्प्युटर शिक्षा प्रदान गर्ने स्थल गुणस्तर युक्त कम्प्युटर भरपर्दो इन्टरनेटसेवा लगायतका भौतिक पूर्वाधारको अभावका कारणले हाल देशका केही ठूला तथा सुविधाजनक सहरहरुका लगानीकर्ताको पहुँचमा मात्रै रहेको यो कारोवारस्थल थप देशव्यापी बनाउन सरकारले पनि आफ्नो स्थानबाट पहल गर्नुपर्दछ । यसका लागि आवश्यक भौतिक पूर्वाधारहरुको विकासतर्फ ध्यान दिनु पर्दछ । तबमात्रै कमोडिटिज एक्सचेन्जहरुले गरेको प्रयासले सफलता प्राप्त गर्न सक्दछ ।
यसका साथै अहिले हरेक नाफामुलक कारोबारमा सरकारले लिइराखेको १०% कर एकदमै अवैज्ञानिक र कारोबारमा संलग्न भएका तथा हुन चाहनेहरुलाई निरुत्साहित बनाउने किसिमको भएको हुँदा उक्त व्यवस्थालाई हटाई कम्तिमा एकदिन भरिको कारोबारलाई समायोजन गरी आउने खुद नाफामा मात्रै कर लिने व्यवस्था गरे अहिले भइराखेको कारोबारसंख्यामा भारी वृद्धि हुने देखिन्छ । साथै विदेशका अन्य एक्सचेन्जहरुमा लगानी गरिरहेका सबै नेपाली लगानीकर्ताहरु नेपालकै एक्सचेन्जहरुमा लगानी गर्न प्रेरित हुने थिए ।

Commodities exchange

A commodities exchange is an exchange where various commodities and derivatives products are traded. Most commodity markets across the world trade in agricultural products and other raw materials (like wheat, barley, sugar, maize, cotton, cocoa, coffee, milk products, pork bellies, oil, metals, etc.) and contracts based on them. These contracts can include spot prices, forwards, futures and options on futures. Other sophisticated products may include interest rates, environmental instruments, swaps, or ocean freight contracts.

[edit] Commodities trading
Commodities exchanges usually trade futures contracts on commodities, such as trading contracts to receive something, say corn, in a certain month. A farmer raising corn can sell a future contract on his corn, which will not be harvested for several months, and guarantee the price he will be paid when he delivers; a breakfast cereal producer buys the contract now and guarantees the price will not go up when it is delivered. This protects the farmer from price drops and the buyer from price rises.

Speculators and investors also buy and sell the futures contracts to make a profit and provide liquidity to the system.

Commodities exchanges across the world
Main commodity exchanges worldwide:

Africa

Exchange Abbreviation Location Product Types
Ethiopia Commodity Exchange ECX Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Agricultural

Americas

Exchange Abbreviation Location Product Types
Brazilian Mercantile and Futures Exchange BMF São Paulo, Brazil Agricultural, Biofuels, Precious Metals
Chicago Board of Trade (CME Group) CBOT Chicago, US Agricultural, Biofuels
Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME Group) CME Chicago, US Agricultural, Biofuels
Chicago Climate Exchange CCX Chicago, US Emissions
HedgeStreet Exchange California, US Energy, industrial Metals
Intercontinental Exchange ICE Atlanta, Georgia, US Energy, Emissions, Agricultural, Biofuels
Kansas City Board of Trade KCBT Kansas City, US Agricultural
Memphis Cotton Exchange Memphis, US Agricultural
Mercado a Termino de Buenos Aires MATba Buenos Aires, Argentina Agricultural
Minneapolis Grain Exchange MGEX Minneapolis Agricultural
New York Mercantile Exchange (CME Group) NYMEX New York, US Energy, Precious Metals, Industrial Metals
U.S. Futures Exchange USFE Chicago, US Energy

Asia

Exchange Abbreviation Location Product Types
Bursa Malaysia MDEX Malaysia Biofuels
Central Japan Commodity Exchange Nagoya,Japan Energy, Industrial Metals, Rubber
Dalian Commodity Exchange DCE Dalian,China Agricultural, Plastics
Dubai Mercantile Exchange DME Dubai Energy
Dubai Gold & Commodities Exchange DGCX Dubai Precious Metals
Iranian oil bourse IOB Kish Island, Iran Oil, Gas, Petrochemicals
Kansai Commodities Exchange KANEX Osaka,Japan Agricultural
Nepal derivative exchange limited NDEX Kathmandu, Nepal Agricultural, Bullion, Base Metals, Energy
Mercantile Exchange Nepal Limited MEX Kathmandu, Nepal Agricultural, Bullion, Base Metals, Energy
Multi Commodity Exchange MCX India Energy, Precious Metals, Metals, Agricultural
National Multi-Commodity Exchange of India Ltd NMCE India Precious Metals, Metals, Agricultural
National Commodity Exchange Limited NCEL Pakistan Precious Metals, Agriculture
Bhatinda Om & Oil Exchange Ltd. BOOE India Agricultural
Karachi Precious Metals, Agricultural
National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange NCDEX Mumbai All
Shanghai Futures Exchange Shanghai Industrial metals, Fuel Oil, Rubber
Singapore Commodity Exchange SICOM Singapore Agricultural, Rubber
Tokyo Commodity Exchange TOCOM Tokyo,Japan Energy, Precious Metals, Industrial Metals, Agricultural
Tokyo Grain Exchange TGE Tokyo,Japan Agricultural
Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange CZCE Zhengzhou,China Agricultural

Europe

Exchange Abbreviation Location Product Types
Commodity Exchange Bratislava, JSC CEB Bratislava, Slovakia Emissions, Agricultural
Climex CLIMEX Amsterdam, the Netherlands Emissions
NYSE Liffe Europe Agricultural
European Climate Exchange ECX Europe Emissions
London Metal Exchange LME London, UK Industrial Metals, Plastics
Risk Management Exchange RMX Hannover, Deutschland Agricultural
European Energy Exchange EEX Leipzig, Germany Energy, Emissions

Oceania

Exchange Abbreviation Location Product Types
Australian Securities Exchange ASX Sydney, Australia Agricultural, Electricity, Thermal Coal & Natural Gas

Commodity market

Commodity markets are markets where raw or primary products are exchanged. These raw commodities are traded on regulated commodities exchanges, in which they are bought and sold in standardized contracts.

This article focuses on the history and current debates regarding global commodity markets. It covers physical product (food, metals, electricity) markets but not the ways that services, including those of governments, nor investment, nor debt, can be seen as a commodity. Articles on reinsurance markets, stock markets, bond markets and currency markets cover those concerns separately and in more depth. One focus of this article is the relationship between simple commodity money and the more complex instruments offered in the commodity markets.

See List of traded commodities for some commodities and their trading units and places.

Contents
1 History
1.1 Early history of commodity markets
2 Size of the market
3 Recent Trends in Commodities
4 Returns
5 Spot trading
6 Forward contracts
7 Futures contracts
7.1 Hedging
7.2 Delivery and condition guarantees
7.3 Standardization
8 Regulation of commodity markets
8.1 Proliferation of contracts, terms, and derivatives
8.2 Oil
8.3 Commodity markets and protectionism
9 Top 5 Commodity Exchanges
10.1 Commodity Exchanges

History
The modern commodity markets have their roots in the trading of agricultural products. While wheat and corn, cattle and pigs, were widely traded using standard instruments in the 19th century in the United States, other basic foodstuffs such as soybeans were only added quite recently in most markets.[citation needed] For a commodity market to be established, there must be very broad consensus on the variations in the product that make it acceptable for one purpose or another.

The economic impact of the development of commodity markets is hard to overestimate. Through the 19th century “the exchanges became effective spokesmen for, and innovators of, improvements in transportation, warehousing, and financing, which paved the way to expanded interstate and international trade.”[citation needed]

Early history of commodity markets
Historically, dating from ancient Sumerian use of sheep or goats, or other peoples using pigs, rare seashells, or other items as commodity money, people have sought ways to standardize and trade contracts in the delivery of such items, to render trade itself more smooth and predictable.

Commodity money and commodity markets in a crude early form are believed to have originated in Sumer where small baked clay tokens in the shape of sheep or goats were used in trade. Sealed in clay vessels with a certain number of such tokens, with that number written on the outside, they represented a promise to deliver that number. This made them a form of commodity money - more than an “I.O.U.” but less than a guarantee by a nation-state or bank. However, they were also known to contain promises of time and date of delivery - this made them like a modern futures contract. Regardless of the details, it was only possible to verify the number of tokens inside by shaking the vessel or by breaking it, at which point the number or terms written on the outside became subject to doubt. Eventually the tokens disappeared, but the contracts remained on flat tablets. This represented the first system of commodity accounting.

However, the Commodity status of living things is always subject to doubt - it was hard to validate the health or existence of sheep or goats. Excuses for non-delivery were not unknown, and there are recovered Sumerian letters[citation needed] that complain of sickly goats, sheep that had already been fleeced, etc.

If a seller’s reputation was good, individual “backers” or “bankers” could decide to take the risk of “clearing” a trade. The observation that trust is always required between market participants later led to credit money. But until relatively modern times, communication and credit were primitive.

Classical civilizations built complex global markets trading gold or silver for spices, cloth, wood and weapons, most of which had standards of quality and timeliness. Considering the many hazards of climate, piracy, theft and abuse of military fiat by rulers of kingdoms along the trade routes, it was a major focus of these civilizations to keep markets open and trading in these scarce commodities. Reputation and clearing became central concerns, and the states which could handle them most effectively became very powerful empires, trusted by many peoples to manage and mediate trade and commerce.

Size of the market
The trading of commodities consists of direct physical trading and derivatives trading.The commodities markets have seen an upturn in the volume of trading in recent years. In the five years up to 2007, the value of global physical exports of commodities increased by 17% while the notional value outstanding of commodity OTC derivatives increased more than 500% and commodity derivative trading on exchanges more than 200%.[citation needed]

The notional value outstanding of banks’ OTC commodities’ derivatives contracts increased 27% in 2007 to $9.0 trillion. OTC trading accounts for the majority of trading in gold and silver. Overall, precious metals accounted for 8% of OTC commodities derivatives trading in 2007, down from their 55% share a decade earlier as trading in energy derivatives rose.

Global physical and derivative trading of commodities on exchanges increased more than a third in 2007 to reach 1,684 million contracts. Agricultural contracts trading grew by 32% in 2007, energy 29% and industrial metals by 30%. Precious metals trading grew by 3%, with higher volume in New York being partially offset by declining volume in Tokyo. Over 40% of commodities trading on exchanges was conducted on US exchanges and a quarter in China. Trading on exchanges in China and India has gained in importance in recent years due to their emergence as significant commodities consumers and producers. [1]

Recent Trends in Commodities

The 2008 global boom in commodity prices - for everything from coal to corn – was fueled by heated demand from the likes of China and India, plus unbridled speculation in forward markets. That bubble popped in the closing months of 2008 across the board. As a result, farmers are expected to face a sharp drop in crop prices, after years of record revenue. Other commodities, such as steel, are also expected to tumble due to lower demand. This will be a rare positive for manufacturing industries, which will experience a drop in some input costs, partly offsetting the decline in downstream demand. [2]

Returns
It is generally agreed that commodities have an expected return of 5% in real terms which is based on the risk premium for 116 different commodities weighted equally since 1888 (Source Report 219171-Wharton Business School). Investment professionals often too mistakenly claim there is no risk premium in commodites.[citation needed]

Spot trading
Spot trading is any transaction where delivery either takes place immediately, or with a minimum lag between the trade and delivery due to technical constraints. Spot trading normally involves visual inspection of the commodity or a sample of the commodity, and is carried out in markets such as wholesale markets. Commodity markets, on the other hand, require the existence of agreed standards so that trades can be made without visual inspection.

Forward contracts
A forward contract is an agreement between two parties to exchange at some fixed future date a given quantity of a commodity for a price defined today. The fixed price today is known as the forward price.

Futures contracts
A futures contract has the same general features as a forward contract but is transacted through a futures exchange.

Commodity and Futures contracts are based on what’s termed “Forward” Contracts. Early on these “forward” contracts (agreements to buy now, pay and deliver later) were used as a way of getting products from producer to the consumer. These typically were only for food and agricultural Products. Forward contracts have evolved and have been standardized into what we know today as futures contracts. Although more complex today, early “Forward” contracts for example, were used for rice in seventeenth century Japan. Modern “forward”, or futures agreements, began in Chicago in the 1840s, with the appearance of the railroads. Chicago, being centrally located, emerged as the hub between Midwestern farmers and producers and the east coast consumer population centers.

Hedging
“Hedging”, a common (and sometimes mandatory[citation needed]) practice of farming cooperatives, insures against a poor harvest by purchasing futures contracts in the same commodity. If the cooperative has significantly less of its product to sell due to weather or insects, it makes up for that loss with a profit on the markets, since the overall supply of the crop is short everywhere that suffered the same conditions.

Whole developing nations may be especially vulnerable, and even their currency tends to be tied to the price of those particular commodity items until it manages to be a fully developed nation. For example, one could see the nominally fiat money of Cuba as being tied to sugar prices[citation needed], since a lack of hard currency paying for sugar means less foreign goods per peso in Cuba itself. In effect, Cuba needs a hedge against a drop in sugar prices, if it wishes to maintain a stable quality of life for its citizens.[citation needed]

Delivery and condition guarantees
In addition, delivery day, method of settlement and delivery point must all be specified. Typically, trading must end two (or more) business days prior to the delivery day, so that the routing of the shipment can be finalized via ship or rail, and payment can be settled when the contract arrives at any delivery point.

Standardization
U.S. soybean futures, for example, are of standard grade if they are “GMO or a mixture of GMO and Non-GMO No. 2 yellow soybeans of Indiana, Ohio and Michigan origin produced in the U.S.A. (Non-screened, stored in silo),” and of deliverable grade if they are “GMO or a mixture of GMO and Non-GMO No. 2 yellow soybeans of Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin origin produced in the U.S.A. (Non-screened, stored in silo).” Note the distinction between states, and the need to clearly mention their status as “GMO” (”Genetically Modified Organism”) which makes them unacceptable to most “organic” food buyers.

Similar specifications apply for cotton, orange juice, cocoa, sugar, wheat, corn, barley, pork bellies, milk, feedstuffs, fruits, vegetables, other grains, other beans, hay, other livestock, meats, poultry, eggs, or any other commodity which is so traded.

Regulation of commodity markets
Cotton, kilowatt-hours of electricity, board feet of wood, long distance minutes, royalty payments due on artists’ works, and other products and services have been traded on markets of varying scale, with varying degrees of success.[citation needed] One issue that presents major difficulty for creators of such instruments is the liability accruing to the purchaser:

Unless the product or service can be guaranteed or insured to be free of liability based on where it came from and how it got to market, e.g., kilowatts must come to market free from legitimate claims for smog death from coal burning plants, wood must be free from claims that it comes from protected forests, royalty payments must be free of claims of plagiarism or piracy, it becomes impossible for sellers to guarantee a uniform delivery.

Generally, governments must provide a common regulatory or insurance standard and some release of liability, or at least a backing of the insurers, before a commodity market can begin trading. This is a major source of controversy in for instance the energy market, where desirability of different kinds of power generation varies drastically. In some markets, e.g. Toronto, Canada, surveys established that customers would pay 10-15% more for energy that was not from coal or nuclear, but strictly from renewable sources such as wind.[citation needed]

In the United States, the principal regulator of commodity and futures markets is the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

Proliferation of contracts, terms, and derivatives
However, if there are two or more standards of risk or quality, as there seem to be for electricity or soybeans, it is relatively easy to establish two different contracts to trade in the more and less desirable deliverable separately. If the consumer acceptance and liability problems can be solved, the product can be made interchangeable, and trading in such units can begin.

Since the detailed concerns of industrial and consumer markets vary widely, so do the contracts, and “grades” tend to vary significantly from country to country. A proliferation of contract units, terms, and futures contracts have evolved, combined into an extremely sophisticated range of financial instruments.

These are more than one-to-one representations of units of a given type of commodity, and represent more than simple futures contracts for future deliveries. These serve a variety of purposes from simple gambling to price insurance…

Oil
Building on the infrastructure and credit and settlement networks established for food and precious metals, many such markets have proliferated drastically in the late 20th century. Oil was the first form of energy so widely traded, and the fluctuations in the oil markets are of particular political interest.

Some commodity market speculation is directly related to the stability of certain states, e.g. during the Persian Gulf War, speculation on the survival of the regime of Saddam Hussein in Iraq. Similar political stability concerns have from time to time driven the price of oil.

The oil market is an exception. Most markets are not so tied to the politics of volatile regions - even natural gas tends to be more stable, as it is not traded across oceans by tanker as extensively.

Commodity markets and protectionism
Developing countries (democratic or not) have been moved to harden their currencies, accept IMF rules, join the WTO, and submit to a broad regime of reforms that amount to a “hedge” against being isolated. China’s entry into the WTO signalled the end of truly isolated nations entirely managing their own currency and affairs. The need for stable currency and predictable clearing and rules-based handling of trade disputes, has led to a global trade hegemony - many nations “hedging” on a global scale against each other’s anticipated “protectionism”, were they to fail to join the WTO.

There are signs, however, that this regime is far from perfect. U.S. trade sanctions against Canadian softwood lumber (within NAFTA) and foreign steel (except for NAFTA partners Canada and Mexico) in 2002 signalled a shift in policy towards a tougher regime perhaps more driven by political concerns - jobs, industrial policy, even sustainable forestry and logging practices.

Top 5 Commodity Exchanges
Exchange Country Volume per month $M
New York Mercantile Exchange USA 19[3]
Tokyo Commodity Exchange Japan -
NYSE Euronext EU -
Dalian Commodity Exchange China -
Multi Commodity Exchange India -

Commodity Exchanges
Abuja Securities and Commodities Exchange
Bhatinda Om & Oil Exchange Bathinda
Brazilian Mercantile and Futures Exchange
Chicago Board of Trade
Chicago Mercantile Exchange
Commodity Exchange Bratislava, JSC
Dalian Commodity Exchange
Dubai Mercantile Exchange
Euronext.liffe
Intercontinental Exchange
Kansas City Board of Trade
London Metal Exchange
Minneapolis Grain Exchange
Multi Commodity Exchange
National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange
National Multi-Commodity Exchange of India Ltd
National Food Exchange
New York Mercantile Exchange
New York Board of Trade
Rosario Board of Trade
Steelbay
Winnipeg Commodity Exchange
National Spot Exchange

About Derivative

A derivative is a financial instrument that is derived from some other asset, index, event, value or condition (known as the underlying asset). Rather than trade or exchange the underlying asset itself, derivative traders enter into an agreement to exchange cash or assets over time based on the underlying asset. A simple example is a futures contract: an agreement to exchange the underlying asset at a future date.

Derivatives are often leveraged, such that a small movement in the underlying value can cause a large difference in the value of the derivative.

Derivatives can be used by investors to speculate and to make a profit if the value of the underlying moves the way they expect (e.g. moves in a given direction, stays in or out of a specified range, reaches a certain level). Alternatively, traders can use derivatives to hedge or mitigate risk in the underlying, by entering into a derivative contract whose value moves in the opposite direction to their underlying position and cancels part or all of it out.

Derivatives are usually broadly categorised by:

The relationship between the underlying and the derivative (e.g. forward, option, swap)
The type of underlying (e.g. Equity derivatives, foreign exchange derivatives, credit derivatives)
The market in which they trade (e.g., exchange traded or over-the-counter)
Contents [hide]
1 Uses
1.1 Hedging
1.2 Speculation and arbitrage
2 Types of derivatives
2.1 OTC and exchange-traded
2.2 Common derivative contract types
2.3 Examples
3 Cash flow
4 Valuation
4.1 Market and arbitrage-free prices
4.2 Determining the market price
4.3 Determining the arbitrage-free price
5 Criticisms
5.1 Possible large losses
5.2 Counter-party risk
5.3 Unsuitably high risk for small/inexperienced investors
5.4 Large notional value
5.5 Leverage of an economy’s debt
6 Benefits
7 Definitions
8 References
9 See also
10 External links

[edit] Uses
[edit] Hedging
A technique designed to eliminate or reduce risk.

Derivatives allow risk about the price of the underlying asset to be transferred from one party to another. For example, a wheat farmer and a miller could sign a futures contract to exchange a specified amount of cash for a specified amount of wheat in the future. Both parties have reduced a future risk: for the wheat farmer, the uncertainty of the price, and for the miller, the availability of wheat. However, there is still the risk that no wheat will be available due to causes unspecified by the contract, like the weather, or that one party will renege on the contract. Although a third party, called a clearing house, insures a futures contract, not all derivatives are insured against counterparty risk.

From another perspective, the farmer and the miller both reduce a risk and acquire a risk when they sign the futures contract: The farmer reduces the risk that the price of wheat will fall below the price specified in the contract and acquires the risk that the price of wheat will rise above the price specified in the contract (thereby losing additional income that he could have earned). The miller, on the other hand, acquires the risk that the price of wheat will fall below the price specified in the contract (thereby paying more in the future than he otherwise would) and reduces the risk that the price of wheat will rise above the price specified in the contract. In this sense, one party is the insurer (risk taker) for one type of risk, and the counterparty is the insurer (risk taker) for another type of risk.

Hedging also occurs when an individual or institution buys an asset (like a commodity, a bond that has coupon payments, a stock that pays dividends, and so on) and sells it using a futures contract. The individual or institution has access to the asset for a specified amount of time, and then can sell it in the future at a specified price according to the futures contract. Of course, this allows the individual or institution the benefit of holding the asset while reducing the risk that the future selling price will deviate unexpectedly from the market’s current assessment of the future value of the asset.

Derivatives traders at the Chicago Board of Trade.Derivatives serve a legitimate business purpose. For example a corporation borrows a large sum of money at a specific interest rate.[1] The rate of interest on the loan resets every six months. the corporation is concerned that the rate of interest may be much higher in six months. The corporation could buy a forward rate agreement. A forward rate agreement is a contract to pay a fixed rate of interest six months after purchases on a notional sum of money.[2] If the interest rate after six months is above the contract rate the seller pays the difference to the FRA buyer, the corporation. If the rate is lower the corporation would pay the difference to the seller. The purchase of the FRA would serve to reduce the uncertainty concerning the rate increase and stabilize earnings.

[edit] Speculation and arbitrage
Derivatives can be used to acquire risk, rather than to insure or hedge against risk. Thus, some individuals and institutions will enter into a derivative contract to speculate on the value of the underlying asset, betting that the party seeking insurance will be wrong about the future value of the underlying asset. Speculators will want to be able to buy an asset in the future at a low price according to a derivative contract when the future market price is high, or to sell an asset in the future at a high price according to a derivative contract when the future market price is low.

Individuals and institutions may also look for arbitrage opportunities, as when the current buying price of an asset falls below the price specified in a futures contract to sell the asset.

Speculative trading in derivatives gained a great deal of notoriety in 1995 when Nick Leeson, a trader at Barings Bank, made poor and unauthorized investments in futures contracts. Through a combination of poor judgment, lack of oversight by the bank’s management and by regulators, and unfortunate events like the Kobe earthquake, Leeson incurred a $1.3 billion loss that bankrupted the centuries-old institution.[3]

[edit] Types of derivatives
[edit] OTC and exchange-traded
Broadly speaking there are two distinct groups of derivative contracts, which are distinguished by the way they are traded in the market:

Over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives are contracts that are traded (and privately negotiated) directly between two parties, without going through an exchange or other intermediary. Products such as swaps, forward rate agreements, and exotic options are almost always traded in this way. The OTC derivative market is the largest market for derivatives, and is largely unregulated with respect to disclosure of information between the parties, since the OTC market is made up of banks and other highly sophisticated parties, such as hedge funds. Reporting of OTC amounts are difficult because trades can occur in private, without activity being visible on any exchange. According to the Bank for International Settlements, the total outstanding notional amount is $684 trillion (as of June 2008)[4]. Of this total notional amount, 67% are interest rate contracts, 8% are credit default swaps (CDS), 9% are foreign exchange contracts, 2% are commodity contracts, 1% are equity contracts, and 12% are other. Because OTC derivatives are not traded on an exchange, there is no central counterparty. Therefore, they are subject to counterparty risk, like an ordinary contract, since each counterparty relies on the other to perform.
Exchange-traded derivatives (ETD) are those derivatives products that are traded via specialized derivatives exchanges or other exchanges. A derivatives exchange acts as an intermediary to all related transactions, and takes Initial margin from both sides of the trade to act as a guarantee. The world’s largest[5] derivatives exchanges (by number of transactions) are the Korea Exchange (which lists KOSPI Index Futures & Options), Eurex (which lists a wide range of European products such as interest rate & index products), and CME Group (made up of the 2007 merger of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Chicago Board of Trade and the 2008 acquisition of the New York Mercantile Exchange). According to BIS, the combined turnover in the world’s derivatives exchanges totalled USD 344 trillion during Q4 2005. Some types of derivative instruments also may trade on traditional exchanges. For instance, hybrid instruments such as convertible bonds and/or convertible preferred may be listed on stock or bond exchanges. Also, warrants (or “rights”) may be listed on equity exchanges. Performance Rights, Cash xPRTs and various other instruments that essentially consist of a complex set of options bundled into a simple package are routinely listed on equity exchanges. Like other derivatives, these publicly traded derivatives provide investors access to risk/reward and volatility characteristics that, while related to an underlying commodity, nonetheless are distinctive.
[edit] Common derivative contract types
There are three major classes of derivatives:

Futures/Forwards are contracts to buy or sell an asset on or before a future date at a price specified today. A futures contract differs from a forward contract in that the futures contract is a standardized contract written by a clearing house that operates an exchange where the contract can be bought and sold, while a forward contract is a non-standardized contract written by the parties themselves.
Options are contracts that give the owner the right, but not the obligation, to buy (in the case of a call option) or sell (in the case of a put option) an asset. The price at which the sale takes place is known as the strike price, and is specified at the time the parties enter into the option. The option contract also specifies a maturity date. In the case of a European option, the owner has the right to require the sale to take place on (but not before) the maturity date; in the case of an American option, the owner can require the sale to take place at any time up to the maturity date. If the owner of the contract exercises this right, the counterparty has the obligation to carry out the transaction.
Swaps are contracts to exchange cash (flows) on or before a specified future date based on the underlying value of currencies/exchange rates, bonds/interest rates, commodities, stocks or other assets.
More complex derivatives can be created by combining the elements of these basic types. For example, the holder of a swaption has the right, but not the obligation, to enter into a swap on or before a specified future date.

[edit] Examples
The overall derivatives market has five major classes of underlying asset:

interest rate derivatives (the largest)
foreign exchange derivatives
credit derivatives
equity derivatives
commodity derivatives
Weather derivatives
Some common examples of these derivatives are:

UNDERLYING CONTRACT TYPES
Exchange-traded futures Exchange-traded options OTC swap OTC forward OTC option
Equity DJIA Index future
Single-stock future Option on DJIA Index future
Single-share option Equity swap Back-to-back
Repurchase agreement Stock option
Warrant
Turbo warrant
Interest rate Eurodollar future
Euribor future Option on Eurodollar future
Option on Euribor future Interest rate swap Forward rate agreement Interest rate cap and floor
Swaption
Basis swap
Bond option
Credit Bond future Option on Bond future Credit default swap
Total return swap Repurchase agreement Credit default option
Foreign exchange Currency future Option on currency future Currency swap Currency forward Currency option
Commodity WTI crude oil futures Weather derivatives Commodity swap Iron ore forward contract Gold option

Other examples of underlying exchangeables are:

Property (mortgage) derivatives
Economic derivatives that pay off according to economic reports [1] as measured and reported by national statistical agencies
Freight derivatives
Inflation derivatives
Insurance derivatives[citation needed]
[edit] Cash flow
The payments between the parties may be determined by:

The price of some other, independently traded asset in the future (e.g., a common stock);
The level of an independently determined index (e.g., a stock market index or heating-degree-days);
The occurrence of some well-specified event (e.g., a company defaulting);
An interest rate;
An exchange rate;
Or some other factor.
Some derivatives are the right to buy or sell the underlying security or commodity at some point in the future for a predetermined price. If the price of the underlying security or commodity moves into the right direction, the owner of the derivative makes money; otherwise, they lose money or the derivative becomes worthless. Depending on the terms of the contract, the potential gain or loss on a derivative can be much higher than if they had traded the underlying security or commodity directly.

[edit] Valuation

Total world derivatives from 1998-2007[6] compared to total world wealth in the year 2000[7][edit] Market and arbitrage-free prices
Two common measures of value are:

Market price, i.e. the price at which traders are willing to buy or sell the contract
Arbitrage-free price, meaning that no risk-free profits can be made by trading in these contracts; see rational pricing
[edit] Determining the market price
For exchange-traded derivatives, market price is usually transparent (often published in real time by the exchange, based on all the current bids and offers placed on that particular contract at any one time). Complications can arise with OTC or floor-traded contracts though, as trading is handled manually, making it difficult to automatically broadcast prices. In particular with OTC contracts, there is no central exchange to collate and disseminate prices.

[edit] Determining the arbitrage-free price
The arbitrage-free price for a derivatives contract is complex, and there are many different variables to consider. Arbitrage-free pricing is a central topic of financial mathematics. The stochastic process of the price of the underlying asset is often crucial. A key equation for the theoretical valuation of options is the Black–Scholes formula, which is based on the assumption that the cash flows from a European stock option can be replicated by a continuous buying and selling strategy using only the stock. A simplified version of this valuation technique is the binomial options model.

[edit] Criticisms
Derivatives are often subject to the following criticisms:

[edit] Possible large losses
See also: List of trading losses
The use of derivatives can result in large losses due to the use of leverage, or borrowing. Derivatives allow investors to earn large returns from small movements in the underlying asset’s price. However, investors could lose large amounts if the price of the underlying moves against them significantly. There have been several instances of massive losses in derivative markets, such as:

The need to recapitalize insurer American International Group (AIG) with $85 billion of debt provided by the US federal government[8]. An AIG subsidiary had lost more than $18 billion over the preceding three quarters on Credit Default Swaps (CDS) it had written.[9] It was reported that the recapitalization was necessary because further losses were foreseeable over the next few quarters.
The loss of $7.2 Billion by Société Générale in January 2008 through mis-use of futures contracts.
The loss of US$6.4 billion in the failed fund Amaranth Advisors, which was long natural gas in September 2006 when the price plummeted.
The loss of US$4.6 billion in the failed fund Long-Term Capital Management in 1998.
The bankruptcy of Orange County, CA in 1994, the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. On December 6, 1994, Orange County declared Chapter 9 bankruptcy, from which it emerged in June 1995. The county lost about $1.6 billion through derivatives trading. Orange County was neither bankrupt nor insolvent at the time; however, because of the strategy the county employed it was unable to generate the cash flows needed to maintain services. Orange County is a good example of what happens when derivatives are used incorrectly and positions liquidated in an unplanned manner; had they not liquidated they would not have lost any money as their positions rebounded.[citation needed] Potentially problematic use of interest-rate derivatives by US municipalities has continued in recent years. See, for example:[10]
The Nick Leeson affair in 1994
[edit] Counter-party risk
Derivatives (especially swaps) expose investors to counter-party risk.

For example, suppose a person wanting a fixed interest rate loan for his business, but finding that banks only offer variable rates, swaps payments with another business who wants a variable rate, synthetically creating a fixed rate for the person. However if the second business goes bankrupt, it can’t pay its variable rate and so the first business will lose its fixed rate and will be paying a variable rate again. If interest rates have increased, it is possible that the first business may be adversely affected, because it may not be prepared to pay the higher variable rate.

Different types of derivatives have different levels of risk for this effect. For example, standardized stock options by law require the party at risk to have a certain amount deposited with the exchange, showing that they can pay for any losses; Banks who help businesses swap variable for fixed rates on loans may do credit checks on both parties. However in private agreements between two companies, for example, there may not be benchmarks for performing due diligence and risk analysis.

[edit] Unsuitably high risk for small/inexperienced investors
Derivatives pose unsuitably high amounts of risk for small or inexperienced investors. Because derivatives offer the possibility of large rewards, they offer an attraction even to individual investors. However, speculation in derivatives often assumes a great deal of risk, requiring commensurate experience and market knowledge, especially for the small investor, a reason why some financial planners advise against the use of these instruments. Derivatives are complex instruments devised as a form of insurance, to transfer risk among parties based on their willingness to assume additional risk, or hedge against it.

[edit] Large notional value
Derivatives typically have a large notional value. As such, there is the danger that their use could result in losses that the investor would be unable to compensate for. The possibility that this could lead to a chain reaction ensuing in an economic crisis, has been pointed out by famed investor Warren Buffett in Berkshire Hathaway’s annual report. Buffett called them ‘financial weapons of mass destruction.’ The problem with derivatives is that they control an increasingly larger notional amount of assets and this may lead to distortions in the real capital and equities markets. Investors begin to look at the derivatives markets to make a decision to buy or sell securities and so what was originally meant to be a market to transfer risk now becomes a leading indicator.
(See Berkshire Hathaway Annual Report for 2002)

[edit] Leverage of an economy’s debt
Derivatives massively leverage the debt in an economy, making it ever more difficult for the underlying real economy to service its debt obligations, thereby curtailing real economic activity, which can cause a recession or even depression. In the view of Marriner S. Eccles, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman from November, 1934 to February, 1948, too high a level of debt was one of the primary causes of the 1920s-30s Great Depression. (See Berkshire Hathaway Annual Report for 2002)

[edit] Benefits
Nevertheless, the use of derivatives also has its benefits:

Derivatives facilitate the buying and selling of risk, and many people consider this to have a positive impact on the economic system. Although someone loses money while someone else gains money with a derivative, under normal circumstances, trading in derivatives should not adversely affect the economic system because it is not zero sum in utility.
Former Federal Reserve Board chairman Alan Greenspan commented in 2003 that he believed that the use of derivatives has softened the impact of the economic downturn at the beginning of the 21st century.[citation needed]
[edit] Definitions
Bilateral netting: A legally enforceable arrangement between a bank and a counter-party that creates a single legal obligation covering all included individual contracts. This means that a bank’s obligation, in the event of the default or insolvency of one of the parties, would be the net sum of all positive and negative fair values of contracts included in the bilateral netting arrangement.
Credit derivative: A contract that transfers credit risk from a protection buyer to a credit protection seller. Credit derivative products can take many forms, such as credit default swaps, credit linked notes and total return swaps.
Derivative: A financial contract whose value is derived from the performance of assets, interest rates, currency exchange rates, or indexes. Derivative transactions include a wide assortment of financial contracts including structured debt obligations and deposits, swaps, futures, options, caps, floors, collars, forwards and various combinations thereof.
Exchange-traded derivative contracts: Standardized derivative contracts (e.g. futures contracts and options) that are transacted on an organized futures exchange.
Gross negative fair value: The sum of the fair values of contracts where the bank owes money to its counter-parties, without taking into account netting. This represents the maximum losses the bank’s counter-parties would incur if the bank defaults and there is no netting of contracts, and no bank collateral was held by the counter-parties.
Gross positive fair value: The sum total of the fair values of contracts where the bank is owed money by its counter-parties, without taking into account netting. This represents the maximum losses a bank could incur if all its counter-parties default and there is no netting of contracts, and the bank holds no counter-party collateral.
High-risk mortgage securities: Securities where the price or expected average life is highly sensitive to interest rate changes, as determined by the FFIEC policy statement on high-risk mortgage securities.
Notional amount: The nominal or face amount that is used to calculate payments made on swaps and other risk management products. This amount generally does not change hands and is thus referred to as notional.
Over-the-counter (OTC) derivative contracts: Privately negotiated derivative contracts that are transacted off organized futures exchanges.
Structured notes: Non-mortgage-backed debt securities, whose cash flow characteristics depend on one or more indices and / or have embedded forwards or options.
Total risk-based capital: The sum of tier 1 plus tier 2 capital. Tier 1 capital consists of common shareholders equity, perpetual preferred shareholders equity with non-cumulative dividends, retained earnings, and minority interests in the equity accounts of consolidated subsidiaries. Tier 2 capital consists of subordinated debt, intermediate-term preferred stock, cumulative and long-term preferred stock, and a portion of a bank’s allowance for loan and lease losses.
[edit] References
^ Chisolm, Derivatives Demystified (Wiley 2004)
^ Chisolm, Derivatives Demystified (Wiley 2004) Notional sum means there is no actual principal.
^ How Leeson broke the bank - BBC Economy http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/375259.stm
^ BIS survey: The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) semi-annual OTC derivatives statistics report, for end of June 2008, shows $683.7 trillion total notional amounts outstanding of OTC derivatives with a gross market value of $20 trillion. See also Prior Period Regular OTC Derivatives Market Statistics.)
^ Futures and Options Week: According to figures published in F&O Week 10 October 2005. See also FOW Website.
^ http://www.bis.org/statistics/derstats.htm
^ “Launch of the WIDER study on The World Distribution of Household Wealth: 5 December 2006″. http://www.wider.unu.edu/events/past-events/2006-events/en_GB/05-12-2006/. Retrieved 9 June 2009.
^ Derivatives Counter-party Risk: Lessons from AIG and the Credit Crisis
^ “Buffett’s Time Bomb Goes Off on Wall Street” by James B. Kelleher of Reuters
^ Risk Magazine article on post-Katrina financing

गच्छदारलगायत् ७ जना पार्टीबाट निश्कासित

गच्छदारद्वारा पार्टी नफुटेको दाबी

प्रेस सम्मेलनको भिडियोसहित

काठमाडौं, जेठ २२ (नागरिक)- मधेसी जनअधिकार फोरमको केन्द्रीय समितिको बैठकले उपप्रधानमन्त्री विजयकुमार गच्छदारसहित सात जनालाई पार्टीबाट निश्कासन गरेको छ। गच्छदारले भने आफ्नो निष्कासनलाई अवैधानिक भन्दै फोरम नफुटेको र सरकारलाई समर्थन यथावत रहने बताएका छन्। शुक्रबार साँझ रिपोर्टस क्लबमा पत्रकार सम्मलेन मार्फत गच्छदारले शुक्रबार पार्टीको केन्द्रीय समितिको बैठक नबसेको र केही नेताले चाहँदैमा आफूलाई पार्टीबाट निश्कासन गर्न नसक्ने जिकिर गरे।

“पार्टी फुट्दैन,” गच्छदारले पत्रकार माझ भने, “पार्टीका हरेक निकायमा सरकारमा सहभागी हुनुपर्छ भन्नेको बहुमत छ। पार्टी अध्यक्ष पक्षले आफ्नो निर्णय नसच्याई सुखै छैन।”

यसअगाडि फोरमले निश्कासित गरेकाहरुमा शरदसिंह भण्डारी, जितेन्द्र देव, रामेश्वरराय यादव, रामजनम चौधरी, उपेन्द्र झा र रत्नेश्वरलाल कायस्थ छन्। फोरमले सरकारलाई दिएको समर्थन फिर्ता लिँदै सरकारविरुद्ध जेठ २५ गते मधेस बन्दको कार्यक्रमसमेत घोषणा गरेको छ।

शुक्रबार राजधानीमा आयोजित प्रेस सम्मेलनमा अध्यक्ष उपेन्द्र यादवले अरु पार्टीबाट बहिस्कृत मधेसका दुश्मन भन्दैं गच्छदारको कडा आलोचना गरेका थिए। 

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पत्रकारसम्मेलनमा यादवले नेपाली काङ्ग्रेस नेकपा एमाले तराई मधेस लोकतान्त्रिक पार्टी र सदभावना पार्टीले आफ्नो पार्टी फुटाउन खोजेको आरोप लगाए। 

अध्यक्ष यादवले अब फोरमले सरकारलाई दिएको समर्थन फिर्ता लिई विपक्षमा बस्ने बताए।  

पार्टीको अनुशासन उल्लङ्घन गर्ने सभासद् र कार्यकर्तालाई पनि पार्टीको अनुशासन समितिद्वारा कारबाही अघि बढाइने बताउँदै उहाँले अलमलमा परेको कार्यकर्तालाई पार्टीमै फर्कन आह्वान गरे। 

मधेसविरोधी षड्यन्त्र गर्नेका विरुद्धमा सडक र सदनबाट सशक्त आन्दोलन गरिने जानकारी दिँदै तर शान्तिप्रकि्रया संविधान निर्माण र सङ्घीय लोकतन्त्रको संस्थागत विकासमा पार्टी प्रतिबद्ध रहेको यादवले बताए।  

कार्यक्रममा पार्टीका सह-अध्यक्ष जयप्रकाशप्रसाद गुप्ताले प्रधानमन्त्रीले सम्बन्धित पार्टीको सिफारिसमा मात्र मन्त्री नियुक्त गर्ने प्रावधान संविधानमा रहेको उल्लेख गर्दै यो सरकारको गठन असंवैधानिक पार्टी पद्धति र दलीय परम्परा उल्लङ्घन गरी अनैतिक तवरले भएको आरोप लगाए। 

पार्टीको बहुमत सभासद् अझै पनि आफ्नै पक्षमा रहेको दाबी गर्दै सहअध्यक्ष गुप्ताले २८ जना सभासद्को हस्ताक्षरको प्रतिलिपि पत्रकारहरुलाई वितरण गरे। 

उनले सरकारको न्यूनतम साझा कार्यक्रममा आफ्नो पार्टी अध्यक्षले हस्ताक्षर गरेको उल्लेख गर्दै प्रधानमन्त्रीले आफ्नो पार्टीप्रति दोहोरो मापदण्ड अपनाई पार्टीलाई नसोधी विजयकुमार गच्छदारलाई उपप्रधानमन्त्री बनाएको आरोप पनि लगाए । 

पार्टीभित्र दुईधार छ भन्ने भ्रम गच्छदारले पार्टीमा फैलाउने गरेको उल्लेख गर्दै सहअध्यक्ष गुप्ताले गच्छदारले विभिन्न लोभ र प्रलोभन दिएर सभासद्हरुलाई आफ्नो पक्षमा पारेको र त्यसमध्ये केही सभासद्ले यो कुरा महसुस गरी र्पाटीमा फर्किसकेको दाबी उनले गरे । 

यसअघि उपप्रधान एवं भौतिक योजना तथा निर्माण मन्त्री विजय गच्छदारलाई मधेशी जन अधिकार फोरमका अध्यक्ष उपेन्द्र यादव पक्षधर कार्यकर्ताले शुक्रबार बिहान कालो झन्डा देखाएका छन् भने उनी चढेको गाडीमाथि ढुङ्गा प्रहार भएको छ।

शुक्रबार बिहान आफ्ना केही समर्थक लिएर मन्त्री गच्छदार पार्टी कार्यालय बुद्धनगर पुगेका थिए। गच्छदारको गाडीमा असन्तुष्ट समूहले ढुंगा प्रहार गरेपछि बाक्लो संख्यामा उपस्थित प्रहरीले मन्त्रीले उनलाई सुरक्षा दिएका थिए।

रिपब्लिकाडटकमका अनुसार ढुङ्गाको प्रहारबाट गच्छदारको गाडीको सिसामा सामान्य क्षति पुगेको छ। गच्छदारका कार्यकर्ताले पार्टी कार्यालयमा लागेको ताला फुटाएका थिए। गच्छदारले कार्यालय छिरेर त्यहाँ रहेका मधेश आन्दोलनमा सहिद भएकाहरुको तस्वीरमा श्रद्धान्जली अर्पण गरे।
गच्छदारद्वारा पदभार ग्रहण
उपप्रधानमन्त्री गच्छदारले शुक्रबार बिहान भौतिक योजना तथा निर्माण मन्त्रालयमा पदभार ग्रहण गरेका छन्। उनले पदभारपछि फोरमले सरकारमा दिएको समर्थन लिने कुनै संभावना नभएको बताए। पार्टी अध्यक्ष यादव र सह अध्यक्ष जेपी गुप्तालाई पनि सरकारमा सहभागी गराउन आफ्नो तर्फबाट पहले हुने गच्छदारले बताए।

source: nagariknews.com

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About Romance

As a literary genre of high culture, romance or chivalric romance refers to a style of heroic prose and verse narrative that was particularly current in aristocratic literature of Medieval and Early Modern Europe, that narrated fantastic stories about the marvelous adventures of a chivalrous, heroic knight, often of super-human ability, who goes on a quest. Popular literature also drew on themes of romance, but with ironic, satiric or burlesque intent. Romances often reworked legends and fairy tales and traditional tales about Charlemagne and Roland or King Arthur. A related tradition existed in Northern Europe, and comes down to us in the form of epics, such as Beowulf, which were deeply imbued with dreamlike and magical elements foreign to the classical epics.

Originally, romance literature was written in Old French, Anglo-Norman and Occitan, later, in English and German. During the early 13th century romances were increasingly written as prose. In later romances, particularly those of French origin, there is a marked tendency to emphasize themes of courtly love, such as faithfulness in adversity. From ca. 1800 the connotations of “romance” moved from the magical and fantastic to somewhat eerie “Gothic” adventure narratives.

History/Origins

Holger Danske, or Ogier the Dane, from the Matter of FranceUnlike the later form of the novel and like the chansons de geste, the genre of romance dealt with traditional themes. Overwhelmingly, these were linked in some way, perhaps only in an opening frame story, with three thematic cycles of tales: these were assembled in imagination at a late date as the “Matter of Rome” (actually centered on the life and deeds of Alexander the Great), the “Matter of France” (Charlemagne and Roland, his principal paladin) and the “Matter of Britain” (the lives and deeds of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table, within which was incorporated the quest for the Holy Grail); medieval authors explicitly described these as comprising all romances.[1] In reality, a number of “non-cyclical” romances were written without any such connection;[2] these include such romances as King Horn,[3] Robert the Devil,[4] Emare,[5] Havelok the Dane,[6] and Roswall and Lillian,[7]

The Acritic songs (dealing with Digenis Acritas and his fellow frontiersmen) resemble much the chanson de geste, though they developed simultaneously but separately. A related tradition existed in Northern Europe, and comes down to us in the form of epics, such as Beowulf and the Nibelungenlied. However, the richest set of Germanic literature of Romance comes from Scandinavia in the form of the legendary sagas. The setting is Scandinavia, but occasionally it moves temporarily to more distant and exotic locations. There are also very often mythological elements, such as gods, dwarves, elves, dragons, giants and magic swords. The heroes often embark on dangerous quests where they fight the forces of evil, dragons, witchkings, barrow-wights, and rescue fair maidens.

Fornalder (”Times Past”), by Peter Nicolai ArboMany or most of the sagas are based on distant historic events and this is evident in cases where there are corroborating sources, such as Göngu-Hrólfs saga, Ragnars saga loðbrókar, Yngvars saga víðförla and Völsunga saga. In the case of Hervarar saga the names in the Gothic setting indicate a historic basis, and the latter parts of the saga are still used as a historic source for Swedish history. They often contain very old Germanic matter, such as the Hervarar saga and the Völsunga saga which contains poetry about Sigurd that did not find its way into the Poetic Edda and which would otherwise have been lost. Other sagas deal with heroes such as Ragnar Lodbrok, Starkad, Orvar-Odd, Hagbard and Signy.

Late medieval and Renaissance forms
In late medieval and Renaissance high culture, the important European literary trend was to fantastic fictions in the mode of Romance. Exemplary work, such as the English Le Morte d’Arthur by Sir Thomas Malory (c.1408–1471), and the Spanish or Portuguese Amadis de Gaula (1508), spawned many imitators, and the genre was popularly well-received, producing such masterpiece of Renaissance poetry as Ludovico Ariosto’s Orlando furioso and Torquato Tasso’s Gerusalemme Liberata and other sixteenth-century literary works in the romance genre.

From the high Middle Ages, in works of piety, clerical critics often deemed romances to be harmful worldly distractions from more substantive or moral works, and by 1600 many secular readers would agree; in the judgement of many learned readers in the shifting intellectual atmosphere of the seventeenth century, the romance was trite and childish literature, inspiring only broken-down ageing and provincial persons such as Don Quixote, knight of the culturally isolated province of La Mancha. Hudibras also lampoons the faded conventions of chivalrous romance, from an ironic, consciously realistic viewpoint. Some of the magical and exotic atmosphere of Romance informed tragedies for the stage, such as John Dryden’s collaborative The Indian Queen (1664) as well as Restoration spectaculars and opera seria, such as Handel’s Rinaldo (1711), based on a magical interlude in Tasso’s Gerusalemme liberata.

Many medieval romances recount the marvellous adventures of a chivalrous, heroic knight, often of super-human ability, who, abiding chivalry’s strict codes of honour and demeanour, goes on a quest, and fights and defeats monsters and giants, thereby winning favour with a lady.[8] The story of the medieval romance focuses not upon love and sentiment, but upon adventure.

The first romances heavily drew on the legends and fairy tales to supply their characters with marvelous powers. The tale of Sir Launfal features a fairy bride from folklore, and Sir Orfeo’s wife is kidnapped by the fairy king, and Sir Orfeo frees her from there. These marvelous abilities subside with the development of the genre; fairy women such as Morgan le Fay become enchantresses, and knights lose magical abilities.[9] Romancers wrote many of their stories in three, thematic cycles: (i) the Arthurian (the lives and deeds of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table); (ii) the Carolingian (the lives and deeds of Charlemagne, and Roland, his principal paladin); and, (iii) the Alexandrian (the life and deeds of Alexander the Great).

Originally, this literature was written in Old French, Anglo-Norman and Occitan, later, in English and German— notable later English works being King Horn (a translation of the Anglo-Norman (AN) Romance of Horn of Mestre Thomas), and Havelok the Dane (a translation of the anonymous AN Lai d’Haveloc); around the same time Gottfried von Strassburg’s version of the Tristan of Thomas of Britain (a different Thomas to the author of ‘Horn’) and Wolfram von Eschenbach’s Parzival translated classic French romance narrative into the German tongue.

During the early 13th century romances were increasingly written as prose, and extensively amplified through cycles of continuation. These were collated in the vast, polymorphous manuscript witnesses comprising what is now known as the Vulgate Cycle, with the romance of La Mort le Roi Artu c.1230, perhaps its final installment. These texts, together with a wide range of further Arthurian material, such as that found in the anonymous cycle of English Brut Chronicles, comprised the bases of Malory’s Morte d’Arthur. Prose literature thus increasingly dominanted the expression of romance narrative in the later Middle Ages, at least until the resurgence of verse during the high Renaissance in the oeuvres of Ludovico Ariosto, Torquato Tasso, and Edmund Spenser. Don Quixote (1605, 1615), by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (1547–1616), is a satirical story of an elderly country gentleman, living in La Mancha province, who is so obsessed by chivalric romances that he seeks to emulate their various heroes.

Relationship to modern ‘romantic fiction’
In later Romances, particularly those of French origin, there is a marked tendency to emphasize themes of courtly love, such as faithfulness in adversity. From ca. 1800 the connotations of “romance” moved from fantastic and eerie, somewhat Gothic adventure narratives of novelists like Ann Radcliffe’s The Sicilian Romance (1790) or The Romance of the Forest (1791) with erotic content to novels centered on the episodic development of a courtship that ends in marriage. With a female protagonist, during the rise of Romanticism the depiction of the course of such a courtship within contemporary conventions of realism, the female equivalent of the “novel of education”, informs much Romantic fiction. In gothic novels such as Bram Stoker’s ‘Dracula, the elements of romantic seduction and desire were mingled with fear and dread.

In 1825, the Fantasy genre developed when the Swedish literary work Frithjof’s saga, which was based on the Friðþjófs saga ins frœkna, became successful in England and Germany. It was translated twenty-two times into English, 20 times into German, and into many other European languages, including modern Icelandic in 1866. Their influence on authors, such as J. R. R. Tolkien, William Morris and Poul Anderson and on the subsequent modern fantasy genre is considerable.

Modern usage of term “romance” usually refer to the romance novel, which is a subgenre that focuses on the relationship and romantic love between two people; these novels must have an “emotionally satisfying and optimistic ending.”[10] Despite the popularity of this popular meaning of Romance, other works are still, occasionally, referred to as romances because of their uses of other elements descended from the medieval romance, or from the Romantic movement: larger-than-life heroes and heroines, drama and adventure, marvels that may become fantastic, themes of honor and loyalty, or fairy-tale-like stories and story settings. Shakespeare’s later comedies, such as The Tempest or The Winter’s Tale are sometimes called his romances. Modern works may differentiate from love-story as romance into different genres, such as planetary romance or Ruritanian romance.

References
^ Laura A. Hibbard, Medieval Romance in England, New York Burt Franklin,1963 p iii
^ Laura A. Hibbard, Medieval Romance in England, New York Burt Franklin,1963 p iii
^ Laura A. Hibbard, Medieval Romance in England, New York Burt Franklin,1963 p 83
^ Laura A. Hibbard, Medieval Romance in England, New York Burt Franklin,1963 p 49
^ Laura A. Hibbard, Medieval Romance in England, New York Burt Franklin,1963 p 23
^ Laura A. Hibbard, Medieval Romance in England, New York Burt Franklin,1963 p 103
^ Laura A. Hibbard, Medieval Romance in England, New York Burt Franklin,1963 p 290
^ Northrop Frye, Anatomy of Criticism, p 186, ISBN 0-691-01298-9
^ Katharine Briggs, An Encyclopedia of Fairies, Hobgoblins, Brownies, Boogies, and Other Supernatural Creatures, “Fairies of medieval romances”, p132. ISBN 0-394-73467-X
^ “Romance Novels–What Are They?”. Romance Writers of America. https://www.rwanational.org/eweb/DynamicPage.aspx?Site=rwa&WebKey=18bbfbec-455e-43ff-904d-61b1333ab206. Retrieved on 2007-04-16.

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