Deutsche Boerse launches EEX Asia in Singapore to grow in Asian commodity markets

Reuters  |  SINGAPORE 

By Gloystein and Jessica Jaganathan

, which has global ambitions for EEX, said it would rebrand its Singapore-based subsidiary (CLTX) as EEX Asia, offering futures contracts on freight and seaborne commodities such as and iron ore.

German-based EEX is Europe's biggest bourse for trading power and also a leading exchange for natural gas, coal and carbon trading.

"We have the ambition to become a global commodities exchange," said Egbert Laege, board member and its head of global commodities.

In 2016, bought CLTX, which deals in commodities like iron ore and fuel oil, to get a foothold in Asia, which is by far the world's biggest and fastest growing commodity and

Last year, EEX bought U.S. power and bourse Nodal Exchange.

"The acquisition of CLTX was the first step. Then last year, Nodal was the next step," Laege told the Global Commodities Summit series of interviews that takes place this week.

will keep its brand alive as a platform handling support for commodities traded outside exchanges, known as over-the-counter (OTC) markets.

EEX will initially focus on expanding its freight offerings.

"It's the freight market we find most interesting, especially in It's a key facilitator for global trade ... and there's a huge overlap of Asian and European freight clients," he said, speaking to while attending the Singapore International Energy Week (SIEW).

"The next step will be iron ore."

Growing its dry-bulk business will put EEX in competition with the dominant bourse in this field, the Baltic Exchange, which was bought by Singapore Exchange (SGX) in 2016.

"In some of our offerings, we will be competing with SGX's offerings, for sure," said Laege.

POWER AND GAS NOT QUITE THERE IN ASIA

In Europe, EEX started off as an exchange, before branching out into the main fossil fuels that fire power stations: thermal coal and

While it has established some links in Asia, including early product design projects with the Japan Electric Power Exchange (JEPX), Laege said was not a priority for EEX Asia at this stage.

"As an exchange, you cannot front-run a market. There needs to be a threshold market size and liquidity first, and in Asia's (power and gas markets) we're not quite there yet."

This was also the case for the booming liquefied (LNG) market.

"While it is true that LNG demand is growing, you have a lack of standardized delivery contracts," Laege said, with higher standardization a prerequisite for an LNG exchange product.

Despite some attempts to chance the status quo, "it will have to be seen whether you'll ever have such standardization (in Asian LNG) as you have in U.S. and European natural gas markets," he added.

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(Reporting by Gloystein and Jessica Jaganathan; Editing by Richard Pullin)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, November 01 2018. 06:45 IST