ICE Futures U.S. Board Approves Transition to Fully Electronic Trading for Futures Contracts in March 2008
NEW YORK, Dec. 13 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- IntercontinentalExchange
(NYSE: ICE), a leading global exchange operator and over-the-counter (OTC)
energy marketplace, today announced that the Board of Directors of its ICE
Futures U.S.(TM) subsidiary has voted to end open-outcry trading for futures
contracts at the end of February 2008, as trading in the exchange's futures
contracts is now primarily electronic. Trading in ICE Futures U.S. futures
products will be available exclusively on the ICE platform beginning the
evening of Sunday, March 2, 2008 for the trade date March 3, 2008. The futures
contracts that will transition to fully electronic markets include coffee,
cocoa, cotton, orange juice, sugar, equity indexes and currencies.
Open-outcry trading for all options on futures contracts will continue.
Options on futures contracts at ICE Futures U.S. have not yet begun trading
electronically, and a timeline for the introduction of electronic options will
be provided in the first quarter of 2008.
The trading floor will remain open to support open-outcry trading of
options on futures contracts. It will also be available for use by member
floor brokers who wish to conduct their futures operations or proprietary
trading from the facility.
Trading at the exchange's trading facility in Dublin, Ireland, which
provides open outcry trading of currency futures contracts during the European
trading day, will also end at the close of the session on Friday, February 29,
2008.
These decisions are in accordance with the terms of the merger between ICE
and the New York Board of Trade, now named ICE Futures U.S., which was
approved in December 2006 and closed in January 2007. Under the Merger
Agreement, open-outcry trading for any of the soft commodities may be ended if
average daily open-outcry volume over a rolling three-month period is below
50% of the average daily volume for the comparable period in 2005. Since July,
approximately 80% of soft commodity futures contracts have been traded
electronically.
"After consultation with the commercial and trading communities following
the overwhelming success of electronic trading, the Board has unanimously
voted to transition to fully electronic futures markets. The exchange's
progressive transition to electronic trading this year has brought many
benefits to the market, including growth in volume and participation. We
believe it is in the best interest of our customers and the competitiveness of
the exchange on a global scale to centralize liquidity in an electronic
marketplace," said Tom Farley, President and Chief Operating Officer of ICE
Futures U.S.
Farley added: "With the continued growth opportunities in the commodities
asset class through increased investment and participation, we are pleased
that an increasing number of our open-outcry traders are taking advantage of
the training and trading opportunities we offer at our New York Trading
Center. We welcome the opportunity to provide further training and market
access tools to the community as we complete the transition to electronic
futures markets."
ICE established the ICE Trading Center, located at 2 World Financial
Center in lower Manhattan, earlier this year to provide authorized market
participants with training and the latest in technology and market access to
support the requirements of professional traders. ICE plans to offer new
training courses at the Trading Center for the floor community in early 2008
with an emphasis on the transition from open-outcry to electronic trading. A
detailed schedule of course dates and offerings will be published in the near
future.
ICE Futures will provide further technical, member and customer updates
throughout the process. A Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) document providing
further information about this announcement has been posted to the ICE website
at https://www.theice.com/exchange_notices.jhtml.
About IntercontinentalExchange
IntercontinentalExchange(R) (NYSE: ICE) operates global commodity and
financial products marketplaces, including the world's leading electronic
energy markets and soft commodity exchange. ICE's diverse futures and over-
the-counter (OTC) markets offer contracts based on crude oil and refined
products, natural gas, power and emissions, as well as agricultural
commodities including canola, cocoa, coffee, cotton, ethanol, orange juice,
wood pulp and sugar, in addition to foreign currency and equity index futures
and options. ICE(R) conducts its energy futures markets through ICE Futures
Europe(TM), its London-based futures exchange, which offers the world's
leading oil benchmarks and trades nearly half of the world's global crude
futures in its markets. ICE conducts its soft commodity, foreign exchange and
equity index markets through its U.S. futures exchange, ICE Futures U.S.(TM),
which provides global futures and options markets, as well as clearing
services through ICE Clear U.S.(TM) In August 2007, ICE acquired the Winnipeg
Commodity Exchange Inc., the leading agricultural futures exchange in Canada.
ICE's state-of-the-art electronic trading platform brings market access and
transparency to participants in more than 50 countries. ICE was added to the
Russell 1000(R) Index in June 2006 and the S&P 500 Index in September 2007.
Headquartered in Atlanta, ICE also has offices in Calgary, Chicago, Dublin,
Houston, London, New York, Singapore and Winnipeg. For more information,
please visit www.theice.com.
Safe Harbor Statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act
of 1995 - Statements in this press release regarding
IntercontinentalExchange's business that are not historical facts are
"forward-looking statements" that involve risks and uncertainties. For a
discussion of such risks and uncertainties, which could cause actual results
to differ from those contained in the forward-looking statements, see ICE's
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filings, including, but not limited
to, the risk factors in ICE's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2006, and the Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q for the quarters
ended March 31, June 30 and September 30, 2007, each as filed with the SEC on
February 26, 2007, May 4, 2007, July 27, 2007 and October 26, 2007,
respectively.
SOURCE IntercontinentalExchange