Chicago Mercantile Exchange
Chicago
Mercantile Exchange (CME) Finance Definition
A futures and options exchange that
trades contracts in four main areas: interest rates, stock indexes, foreign
exchange, and commodities. In 2002, a record 558.4 million contracts with a
value of $328.6 trillion traded at the CME, which the CME says is the largest
notional value traded that year on any futures exchange. Among the well-known
contracts that trade on the CME are futures and options on the S&P 500
index, the Eurodollar, and currency futures. Agricultural products traded
include lean hogs, frozen pork bellies, milk, feeder cattle, and live cattle.
The CME was founded as a not-for-profit corporation in 1889 as the Chicago Butter and Egg Board and became the Chicago Mercantile Exchange in 1919. At the time it was founded, the only futures traded were contracts based on butter and eggs. In December 2002, the CME became the first publicly traded U.S. financial exchange when it launched an initial public offering of the Class A shares of its parent company, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Holdings Inc. The shares trade under the ticker symbol CME. Trading is based on open-outcry pit trading during regular trading hours. The CME also operates GLOBEX, an after-hours electronic trading system.
Browse dictionary entries near Chicago Mercantile Exchange
- Chicago Fed National Activity Index
- Chicago Board Options Exchange
- Chicago Board of Trade
- Chicago
- chica
- chic
- chibouque
- chibouk
- Chibchas
- Chibchan
- Chicago Purchasing Managers Index
- Chicago School
- Chicagoan
- chicalote
- Chicana
- Chicanas
- chicane
- chicaned
- chicaneries
- chicanery
