1-Week Futures Contracts on Nonfarm Payrolls

CFTC supports gambling, 500 jobs = $12.50

CME Group, the world’s largest and most diverse derivatives exchange, announced that futures and options on futures on the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ (BLS) Nonfarm Payroll data are scheduled to launch Sunday, April 27, 2008, in anticipation of the Friday, May 2, release of the April economic data.

The contracts, based on the monthly BLS Establishment Survey of 375,000 businesses that is usually released on the first Friday of each month, will allow customers to directly manage their exposure to the government labor number or to offset positions in financial markets. The Nonfarm Payroll report is typically the first major economic release of each month and speaks to the condition of employment from the prior month. It is closely followed as a way to gauge how the Federal Open Markets Committee perceives economic growth.

“There is a strong correlation between the Nonfarm Payroll report and CME Group financial futures contracts as well as other financial instruments,” said Rick Redding, CME Group Managing Director of Products and Services. “Listed futures and options on futures on the Nonfarm Payroll are a transparent, straightforward and accessible way for our customers to offset unexpected financial market moves that often occur when this number comes out.”

The Nonfarm Payroll contracts will be listed exclusively on the CME Globex® electronic trading platform, Sunday through Thursday from 5:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Chicago time. One contract will be listed at a time and each contract will be listed on the Monday after the previous month’s release. Trading in the expiring contract concludes at 7:25 a.m. on the day that the BLS releases its Nonfarm Payroll report. Each contract is valued at $25 times the change in the Nonfarm Payroll number from the previous month.

Posted by jck at 8:26 am EST on March 12th, 2008 |

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply

  • Blogs

    • Portfolio.com: Market Movers

    • Retail Datapoints of the Day
    • Prime Fifth Avenue retail rents, per square foot, in 2000: $675 Prime Fifth Avenue retail rents, per square foot, in 2007: $1,500 Prime Fifth Avenue retail rents, per square foot, in 2007: $2,500 Square footage of the Saks Fifth Avenue ...

    • The Aleph Blog

    • Nonidentical Twins: Solvency and Liquidity
    • “It’s not a solvency problem; it’s a liquidity problem.”  So many people say regarding some financial firms that are on the ropes.  I’ve never liked that way of expressing the problem.  Let me explain why. When does a firm typically ...

    • FT Alphaville

    • Lehman: Thou shalt deny me thrice before the Cox crows
    • CNBC's Charlie Gasparino broke news yesterday of the latest capital raising attempt for Lehman brothers: a warrant offering a 25 per cent stake in Lehman and a 70 per cent stake in its investment management business, Neuberger Berman. The twist ...

    • Le blog d'éconoclaste

    • passage radio
    • Sur RTL, pour l'émission "les auditeurs ont la parole", aujourd'hui (07-08) à 13h10. Au menu : l'emploi et la durée du travail après la parution de l'enquête INSEE. EDIT (15h) : quelques liens complémentaires.

    • Abnormal Returns

    • Tuesday links: harder than it looks
    • How should we interpret the market’s reaction to a nationalization story about the GSEs?  (Dash of Insight, Big Picture, MarketBeat) What will happen, if anything, to the senior debt holders in the GSEs?  (Aleph Blog, Accrued Interest) The ...

    • Going Private

    • The Spiral - Part V - The Board
    • Part V of the Going Private miniseries "The Spiral." The Board of Directors is increasingly perturbed with the Chairman and CEO, but their loyalties are difficult to shed. Self-interest also prevents any meaningful change. Meanwhile, the Chairman and CEO presents ...

    • Stumbling and Mumbling

    • Money & morals
    • Here’s a paradox. One the one hand, there’s good laboratory evidence that money can change people’s behaviour for the worse, making them less likely to co-operate (pdf) with others and more likely to cheat. But on the other hand, there’s...

    • Paul Krugman

    • The python theory of inflation
    • This Python didn’t process dinner very well Richard Fisher, of the Dallas Fed, on inflation: One could reasonably deduce from recent price reversals in oil and food prices that they overshot on the upside and that their price run-up was ...

contact

jck [at]

aleablog [dot] com


© 2008 Alea | Powered by Wordpress


E-mail It