Thursday, July 7, 2011

Currency Derivative in Indian Market











After the NSE and MCX, USE is the third bourse offering currency trading in the country.
“We are witnessing good volumes and it (volumes) has already crossed Rs 2,000 crore in the first hour of trading,” USE Director Gaurav Arora told reporters after the launch.
The exchange commenced operations in the all four currency pairs allowed by SEBI– dollar-rupee, euro-rupee, yen-rupee and pound-rupee.
Currency derivatives can be described as futures contracts between the sellers and buyers, whose values are to be derived from the underlying assets –the currency amounts.
Worldwide, currency derivatives market is bigger than equities with volumes of $3-billion-a-day while India’s contribution is only one per cent. Hence, there is a greater prospect for growth, USE Head T S Narayanswamy said.
Reserve Bank of India Deputy Governor Shyamala Gopinath, who along with SEBI Chairman C B Bhave, inaugurated the bourse, said investors should start looking at currency trading as a new asset class.
Over-the-counter (OTC) activities are for those who have a underline commercial interest and want to hedge, but an instrument like this must be used by all residents, including those who want to speculate on currencies, Gopinath said.
USE is a bourse on set up on public-private partnership with 21 public sector banks, five top private banks, the BSE, state-owned entity MMTC, Jaypee Capital etc having stake in it.

CURRENCY DERIVATIVE MODEL PROJECT DOWNLOAD HERE

 

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