Beijing-backed Singapore bourse is said to get regulator’s nod

Asia Pacific Exchange Pte, has received in-principle approval from the Monetary Authority of Singapore to start a third derivatives exchange in the city, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

Apex is now working on getting final approval from the city’s regulator, according to the people, who asked not be identified because the information is confidential. The company, which has about 40 staff, plans to open its exchange with refined palm oil contracts, the people said. The commodity will be priced in dollars and physical delivery will be in Malaysia and Indonesia.

Apex would be a new rival for Intercontinental Exchange Inc. and Singapore Exchange Ltd., who already operate in Southeast Asia’s biggest derivatives market. The firm, which changed its name from Asia Investment Pte on Aug. 17, has also been filling out its board, adding KKR Inc. senior adviser  Lim Hwee Hua as a director, according to corporate filings. Lim was Singapore’s first female minister and second finance minister until 2011.

Former CME Group Inc. Asia head  Wong Chong Fatt and Mimi Ho, an ex-Monetary Authority of Singapore official who oversaw securities and futures supervision, have also joined the board, the records show.

“As a matter of policy, MAS does not comment on our dealings with individual parties,” the regulator said in an emailed response. A representative for Apex declined to comment.

Palm oil is the world’s most widely consumed vegetable oil, found in goods such as ice cream, instant noodles and lipstick. Indonesia and Malaysia are the world’s top producers of the agricultural commodity, and futures on crude palm oil are most actively traded at Bursa Malaysia Derivatives Bhd. About 850,000 contracts traded in July with open interest of 207,000 contracts, according to bourse data.

The total number of all derivatives traded on exchanges globally reached 25.2 billion contracts in 2016, setting a new annual record, according to figures from FIA, an industry group.

Apex said in an Aug. 14 letter to Singapore’s Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority that it was in the process of working with the city’s financial regulator to get a license as an approved exchange.

The company is majority-
owned by Eugene Zhu Yuchen, a China markets veteran who’s served as head of the China Financial Futures Exchange and Dalian Commodity Exchange, as well as president of Shanghai Pudong Development Bank. Chinese hedge fund manager Ge Weidong’s firm holds a minor stake, according to filings.
Bloomberg

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