I'm going to guess that the liquidity gets split and you end up with two less liquid contracts. The other possibility is that one of these contracts just gets no volume at all -- like what happened over at Eurex...
I was thinking the same thing. Hard for me to imagine they "need" three separate contracts on the same index at the same exchange.Quote from ssternlight:
I'm going to guess that the liquidity gets split and you end up with two less liquid contracts. The other possibility is that one of these contracts just gets no volume at all -- like what happened over at Eurex...
Quote from ssternlight:
I'm going to guess that the liquidity gets split and you end up with two less liquid contracts. The other possibility is that one of these contracts just gets no volume at all -- like what happened over at Eurex...
Quote from Maverick74:
The arbitrage will prevent this from happening. Since both the mini-dow and the big dow are both 100% electronic, the arb programs will keep both these markets very tight. In fact, this new product will help tighten the spreads on the mini-dow.
BTW, I predicted this move over two years ago on ET. I said both the Dow and the ES will introduce a larger product for institutional investors to draw in more liquidity. It freaking took awhile, but they finally did it.
Quote from Maverick74:
The arbitrage will prevent this from happening. Since both the mini-dow and the big dow are both 100% electronic, the arb programs will keep both these markets very tight. In fact, this new product will help tighten the spreads on the mini-dow.
BTW, I predicted this move over two years ago on ET. I said both the Dow and the ES will introduce a larger product for institutional investors to draw in more liquidity. It freaking took awhile, but they finally did it.
Quote from SethArb:
what will happen to the floor locals who trade the $10 dow contract ?
will they have more opp for arb or less ?
will they be forced to switch to screen?
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