Abstract
Historically, coal has been the only major energy commodity without a futures contract. On 12 July 2001 this position changed, when the New York Mercantile Exchange (Nymex) launched its much-anticipated Central Appalachian coal futures contract. It seemed a product whose moment had come. The article discusses the potential of the coal futures contract.
Citation Formats
McFall, K.
Can the New York Mercantile Exchange make coal a tradable commodity?.
United Kingdom: N. p.,
2002.
Web.
McFall, K.
Can the New York Mercantile Exchange make coal a tradable commodity?.
United Kingdom.
McFall, K.
2002.
"Can the New York Mercantile Exchange make coal a tradable commodity?"
United Kingdom.
@misc{etde_20234557,
title = {Can the New York Mercantile Exchange make coal a tradable commodity?}
author = {McFall, K}
abstractNote = {Historically, coal has been the only major energy commodity without a futures contract. On 12 July 2001 this position changed, when the New York Mercantile Exchange (Nymex) launched its much-anticipated Central Appalachian coal futures contract. It seemed a product whose moment had come. The article discusses the potential of the coal futures contract.}
journal = []
issue = {244}
journal type = {AC}
place = {United Kingdom}
year = {2002}
month = {Feb}
}
title = {Can the New York Mercantile Exchange make coal a tradable commodity?}
author = {McFall, K}
abstractNote = {Historically, coal has been the only major energy commodity without a futures contract. On 12 July 2001 this position changed, when the New York Mercantile Exchange (Nymex) launched its much-anticipated Central Appalachian coal futures contract. It seemed a product whose moment had come. The article discusses the potential of the coal futures contract.}
journal = []
issue = {244}
journal type = {AC}
place = {United Kingdom}
year = {2002}
month = {Feb}
}