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A FUTURES MARKET IN CURRENCY
Presented to the New York
Society of Security Analysts, Inc.,
New York, New York,
April 19, 1972.
I criss-crossed the United
States dozens of times during the months leading to the birth of
the IMM and hundreds of times more during the years thereafter in
an unending attempt to explain our new concept and the rationale
behind it. I was like an evangelist spreading the gospel of a new
religion, obsessed with the concept, its promise, and its potential.
I accepted every opportunity to be heard.
To say I was cognizant of
the revolution and potential this new market represented was a bit
of an understatement. In what amounted to nothing short of audacious
bravado I stated in the first Annual Report to the IMM members that:
"The opening of the International Monetary Market on May 16, 1972
was as revolutionary a step as the establishment of the first organized
commodity exchange when that event occurred." "...We believe," I
concluded, "that the IMM is larger in scope than currency futures
alone, and accordingly, we hope to bring to our threshold many other
contracts and commodities that relate directly to monetary matters
and that would complement the economics of money futures."
At the time of this address,
we were less than thirty days from what was to become the dawn of
the financial futures revolution. Most of the financial world had
ignored the coming event. Others scorned our idea, ridiculing the
idea that financial instruments could become the realm of futures
trade. The chance to appear before the New York Society of Security
Analysts was a welcomed opportunity to preach to the heathens.

On the eve of the birth of
the International Monetary Market, it is fitting to address the
Society of Security Analysts. My mission is to explain why there
should be a futures market in currency, how this market will be
different from the existing interbank forward system used by the
commercial world, and why we believe the IMM will succeed.
Indeed, why is there a need
for a futures market in currencies? In other words, might
this not merely be the invention of a legalized form of gambling,
another unnecessary evil? Certainly that has been suggested
by many, on more than one occasion. One might even ask why a
futures market in anything?
The fact of the matter is that,
whether we like it or not, we deal in futures all the time.
The housewife who buys more than she immediately needs because a
given product is on sale; the butcher who contracts for delivery
of pork at an agreed price months in advance of his anticipated
sales: the weaver who agrees to deliver his cloth at a future date,
long before the product is ready; the wholesaler who builds inventory
in advance of anticipated demand.
Isn't the investor in real
estate speculating in futures? Isn't the farmer doing the
same when he plants his crop? Surely a securities analyst is speculating
in futures when he gives a buy recommendation on a particular stock
on the basis of his projection of future earnings. Doesn't the buyer
for a department store take into consideration the same elements
that go into a futures market trade? What is the supply, what is
the demand, what is the trend? Indeed, there are thousands of everyday
examples in business and social life that inherently include the
elements of futures trade and futures speculation. Dealing in futures
is an ordinary, daily occurrence.
Does this suggest that we are
always gambling? I suppose so, in a sense. But only in the sense
that we gamble when we cross a busy intersection. Rather, I think
what we are doing is applying to our social and business needs those
factors that experience has taught us are necessary and prudent
in moving successfully through life. We walk on the green light
and look both ways before we cross the street. A futures exchange
is an extension of this principle. It is a central facility for
businessmen who wish to cross the street more safely. It is
a mechanism which provides the procedure and prescribes the rules
by which certain spheres of commercial activity can shed some risk
and implement their business needs in a more prudent and organized
fashion.
When the first question posed
is approached from this perspective, the question is not why,
but rather why not a futures market in currency? And
why did it take so long to come about?
To begin with, an organized
exchange cannot establish a market in a given product unless society
has an inherent need to transfer risk. In other words, to be viably
traded on a futures exchange, the commodity in question must be
subject to consistent and substantial price changes which necessitate
forward transactions. This also implies that the commodity to be
traded at a futures exchange must be one that already sustains an
active, albeit, decentralized transaction market.
Currency meets the foregoing
requirements. Even before the decision on December 18, 1971
by the financial ministers of the Group of 10 foreignto substantially
widen the permissible band of exchange-rate differentials between
the dollar and other currencies from existing parity to plus or
minus 2.25 percentcurrency was actively traded in the interbank
market on a spot and forward basis. The decision by the Group of
10, necessitated by the dictates of reality, officially recognized
that currency price fluctuations were going to continue in a consistent
and substantial manner. The new rate of parityand the strong
probability of further band expansion or even currency floating,
whether by traditional floating methods, crawling pegs or other
forms of parity adjustmentsdramatically increased the need
for importers, exporters, multinational corporations and financial
institutions to learn and utilize the currency interbank market
for their international business transactions. One can hardly open
the newspaper these days without coming across an item about a loss
suffered by a major company as a consequence of currency value changes,
or about a corporate comptroller who was relieved of his duties
because he neglected to protect his employer from the possibility
of currency devaluation or revaluation. Clearly, the basic elements
for currency to be listed for trade on a future exchange are abundantly
evident.
The real question is should
a futures exchange undertake to do so? For the answer, allow me
to quote from Professor Milton Friedman's paper, The Need for
Futures Markets in Currencies, commissioned by the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange in the fall of 1971:
Changes in the international
financial structure will create a great expansion in the demand
for foreign cover. It is highly desirable that this demand be met
by as broad, as deep, as resilient a futures market in foreign currencies
as possible in order to facilitate foreign trade and investment.
This leads us to the second
question: How is the futures market different from the existing
interbank market? If one simply examines a general definition,
the interbank market performs the same functions as our intended
futures market. Both markets will provide the mechanism for the
purchase and sale of currency for delivery on a forward date. Both,
then, allow for the transfer of risk. However, the similarity ends
with the general definition. The differences begin in application.
The most basic difference is
that the interbank market is restricted to the commercial world.
A futures market will not succeed unless it draws participation
from both the commercial user as well as the speculator. And,
why not the speculator? Doesn't the individualbe he
speculator or not have a similar right as does the businessman
to protect his estate from possible loss by virtue of currency change?
Would it be fair if the individualspeculator or notwere
excluded from the stock market, the bond market, or the real estate
market? But, more importantly, could these markets work effectively
without the individual speculator? The speculator's role in a futures
market is imperative. It is the speculator who can provide
constant bids and offers in the market. It is the speculator who
is willing to accept and offset the risk of the commercial user.
It is the speculator who can fuel the necessary liquidity without
which the commercial participant cannot effectively use the market.
Friedman's requirement for breadth, depth and resiliency are precisely
the features that can be best provided by an organized futures exchange.
Or to put it another way, it is our view that a market in currency
will become viable only through the interaction of speculative and
commercial activity in an open, free and competitive arena. Such
an arena is what we provide.
The second paramount distinction
between the interbank and futures market is the nature of the transactions.
Futures markets are impersonal. They are not tooled for the
specific needs of each separate business transaction, nor is each
transaction defined by the buyer's or seller's specific need of
that moment. Instead, every transaction is based on the same uniform
unit of trade, the same uniform manner of delivery, on the same
uniform predetermined forward date. The element of uniformity
is unique to organized futures exchanges and is perhaps the quintessential
ingredient of their existence. This ingredient makes it possible
for every participant to offset an existing market position with
any other participant regardless with whom the original transaction
was undertaken. Consequently, the exchange becomes the clearinghouse
of all the transactions which allows the exchange to act as the
guarantor to the buyer as well as to the seller. No similar capability
exists in the interbank market. It is the underpinning of liquidity
in futures.
Another difference is in the
way transactions are made. In the interbank market transactions
are private, making it necessary to get other quotes to ensure the
price you are quoted is fair and competitive. In the futures market,
bids and offers are by open outcry in an open and competitive arena.
Less dramatic but also important
is a futures exchange's capacity for compiling and disseminating
facts, statistics and information concerning a particular market.
There is no other agency, except perhaps the federal government,
that can better serve the public and industry concerned. And
there is today an overwhelming need for information on the subject
of currency. This demand is going to continue and increase.
A futures exchange is capable of fulfilling this need in an organized
and comprehensive manner.
Futures exchanges can also
provide the necessary service and communication mechanisms to make
their markets accessible to every segment of commerce, industry
and the public in every corner of the globe. An exchange can
and will provide instant access to all participants, enabling them
to translate their needs to action in seconds. Consequently,
interest in the currency market will expand substantially. When
it does, the need for informed advisors will grow and an educational
process within the brokerage industry will ensue. While this process
is slow and often intangible, it nevertheless is very real and desperately
needed. When it happens, it will greatly benefit the interbank market
as well.
Finally, a futures exchange
will act as a public weather vane and instant barometer of the market.
It will offer an up-to-the-minute opinion poll of skilled, unskilled,
public and commercial experts concerning the value, stability or
lack of stability of a given currency. Good news or bad will
openly and immediately be reflected in the price of the product.
This is a vital element of a competitive marketplace and integral
to the free enterprise system.
The foregoing are but a few
of the basic differences between the futures and interbank markets.
There are many more, but none of them are such that they prevent
co-existence. As a matter of fact, we are certain that if
the IMM is successful, it will both complement and supplement the
existing spot and forward currency market. The interbank market
will learn to depend on the futures market and vice versa.
Will we be successful?
The best and honest answer is that only time will tell. We
have the will and the fortitude; we have the facilities, the infrastructure,
the personnel, the breadth of membership, the communications mechanisms
and (we think) the correct contract specifications. Moreover, while
there are many who disagree, in our opinion all indications so far
are that we will triumph with this idea. The interest we have generated
from commerce and public alikeeven before we started tradinghas
been phenomenal. Even the banking communitywhich received
the idea coolly at firstis taking a second look and in many
cases has lent a hand. Several respected bank officials have even
joined our Board of Directors. In addition, we have received
help, advice and encouragement from virtually every segment of the
academic and financial world as well as from the federal government.
And this is only the beginning.
We realize we have much yet
to learn and that much of our knowledge will come after the market
has opened. As we learn, our market may change; in fact, it may
be dramatically different from what it will be on opening day.
Nor do we anticipate instant success. We strongly feel that
because the concept is important and correct, our market must be
given a minimum test of two or three years before it can be judged.
Finally, why us and why here?
Again Milton Friedman answered the query:
Such a wider market is almost
certain to develop in response to the demand. The major question
is where. The U.S. is a natural place and it is very
much in the interest of the U.S. that it should develop here.
Its development here will encourage the growth of other financial
activities in this country, providing both additional income from
export of services and easing the problem of executing monetary
policy.
Usbecause the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange is a large and established futures institution
with the expertise to take on such a mission; usbecause the
Chicago Mercantile Exchange has created a unique and separate futures
entity to exclusively trade in financial instruments. We believe
in the future of the International Monetary Market. We are ready
to do everything that is necessary and to give it the full measure
of our ability toward its success.
Reprinted
by permission. Excerpted from Melamed on the Markets, by Leo Melamed.
John Wiley & Sons, 1993
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