Chicago Mercantile Exchange
Coverage of Chicago Mercantile Exchange in the Nexus archive.
- Grains mostly lower, livestock mixed
Grain futures on the Chicago Board of Trade were mostly lower in early trading, with corn, oats, and soybeans declining, while wheat rose. Livestock prices on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange were mixed, with live cattle and feeder cattle increasing, but hogs falling.
- Grains mostly lower, livestock mixed
Grain futures on the Chicago Board of Trade were mostly lower in early trading, with July corn as the sole exception. Livestock markets on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange showed mixed results, with beef prices rising and pork prices falling.
- Grains mixed, livestock mixed
Grain futures on the Chicago Board of Trade were mixed in early trading, with July corn and soybeans rising while July wheat and oats fell. On the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, beef showed mixed results, pork declined, and specific livestock contracts like August live cattle and July hogs saw minor gains and losses respectively.
- Grains mostly lower, livestock mixed
Grain futures were mostly lower on the Chicago Board of Trade, with corn rising slightly while wheat, oats, and soybeans showed declines or remained unchanged. Livestock markets on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange were mixed, with live cattle and feeder cattle prices increasing and hog prices falling.
- Grains higher, livestock lower
Grain futures rose on the Chicago Board of Trade, with July corn, wheat, oats, and soybeans all gaining. In contrast, beef and pork prices fell on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, with August live cattle and feeder cattle, as well as July hogs, showing declines.
- Grains mostly lower, livestock mixed
Grain futures on the Chicago Board of Trade were mostly lower in early trading, with corn as the exception, while livestock prices showed mixed results on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Corn rose 1 cent, wheat and soybeans declined, and beef prices increased while pork prices fell.
- Grains lower, livestock mixed
Grain futures on the Chicago Board of Trade declined, with July corn, wheat, oats, and soybeans all posting price drops. Livestock markets on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange showed mixed results, with beef and feeder cattle prices lower while pork prices rose.
- CFTC faces suit over approving Kalshi bid to list ‘perpetual’ futures contracts
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) faces a lawsuit from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) over approving Kalshi's request to list perpetual futures contracts. The CME argues the CFTC's expedited approval without public input violates the Commodity Exchange Act and allows unregulated trading of perpetual contracts, which are typically classified as swaps under the Dodd-Frank Act.
- Grains mostly lower, livestock mixed
Grain futures on the Chicago Board of Trade were mostly lower, with corn and wheat declining, while oats rose. Livestock prices on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange showed mixed results, with live cattle falling but feeder cattle and hogs increasing.
- Grains mostly higher, livestock mixed
Grain futures were mostly higher on the Chicago Board of Trade, with wheat and oats rising, while soybeans remained unchanged. Livestock markets showed mixed results on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, with hogs gaining but cattle prices falling.
- Grains higher, livestock mixed
Grain futures rose on the Chicago Board of Trade, with corn, wheat, oats, and soybeans all showing gains. Livestock prices were mixed on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, with higher beef and lower pork prices.
- Grains mostly lower, livestock mixed
Grain futures on the Chicago Board of Trade were mostly lower in early trading, with corn, wheat, and soybeans declining, while oats rose. Livestock markets on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange showed mixed results, with live cattle unchanged, feeder cattle and hogs lower.
- Grains mostly higher, livestock mixed
Grain futures on the Chicago Board of Trade were mostly higher, with corn, wheat, and soybeans rising, while oats declined. Livestock markets showed mixed results, with beef and cattle prices increasing but pork and hog prices falling.
- CFTC Considers Blocking CME’s 24/7 Oil Contract Bid
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is considering blocking the Chicago Mercantile Exchange's (CME) proposal for a 24/7 oil contract. The article references a trading keyboard at the New York Stock Exchange, but no further details are provided.
- Grains lower, livestock mixed
Grain futures declined on the Chicago Board of Trade, with corn, wheat, oats, and soybeans all losing value. Livestock prices were mixed on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, with live cattle and feeder cattle rising while hogs fell slightly.
- Grains mostly higher, livestock mixed
Grain futures on the Chicago Board of Trade were mostly higher, with corn and oats increasing while wheat declined slightly. Livestock markets on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange showed mixed results, with live cattle prices rising but feeder cattle and hogs falling.
- Grains mostly higher, livestock mixed
Grain futures on the Chicago Board of Trade were mostly higher, with corn, wheat, and oats gaining, while soybeans declined. Livestock markets on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange showed mixed results, with beef prices rising and pork prices falling.
- Grains mostly higher, livestock mixed
Grain futures on the Chicago Board of Trade were mostly higher in early trading, with soybeans and oats showing gains while corn declined slightly. Livestock markets on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange were mixed, with live cattle and feeder cattle prices rising and hogs falling.
- Bitcoin’s famous CME gaps are about to disappear, though three remain unresolved
Bitcoin's CME gaps, which are price discrepancies between the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and other markets, are about to disappear, though three remain unresolved. The article highlights ongoing market dynamics related to Bitcoin trading.
- The Math Behind CME Gaps: Why 77% of Bitcoin Weekend Gaps Fill (And How to Trade Them Systematically)
The article explains how CME Bitcoin Futures market closures over weekends create price gaps due to spot market volatility. Backtesting shows 77% of weekend gaps fill historically, driven by institutional arbitrage. Strategies include targeting gaps >3% and aligning with support/resistance levels.
- Bitcoin's Next Move Hinges on $82K CME Gap as Earnings, FOMC Loom
Bitcoin's recovery rally hinges on the $82K level as Big Tech earnings and the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting influence investor risk appetite. The CME price gap at $82K is identified as a critical threshold for Bitcoin's next move.
- Bitcoin drops from recent highs as traders watch CME gap, DeFi hack fallout
Bitcoin prices declined from recent highs as traders monitor the CME gap and assess the impact of a DeFi hack. Market participants remain cautious amid uncertainty around these developments.