Zee News
India Edition |International Edition
November 21, 2009
         
Japan set to end 115-year-old raw silk futures trading
Updated on Wednesday, September 30, 2009, 16:14 IST Tags:raw silk futuresJapan trading
Tokyo: Japan on Wednesday will end 115 years of raw silk futures trading that help to support its modernisation through the latter half of the 19th century but declined during the course of post-war industrial restructuring.

As demand for futures to cover spot price fluctuation risks has declined due to a decrease in spot transactions, the Tokyo Grain Exchange decided September 15 to delist the raw silk futures tomorrow in the wake of similar action by another exchange in the country.

Japan initiated a raw silk futures exchange at the trading centre of Yokohama in 1894 after its first state-run silk mill went on stream in Tomioka, Gunma Prefecture, in 1872.

Raw silk futures exchanges then opened at various places in Japan before being integrated into two markets in Yokohama and Kobe.

Cocoon and raw silk production was once positioned as the means to earn foreign currencies to enhance Japan's wealth and Army before World War II. Raw silk accounted for some 70 percent of Japan's exports at one point.

As some 40 percent of Japanese farming families undertook cocoon production at the beginning of the Showa Era from 1925, Japan was the world's largest cocoon producer.

Bureau Report


Toolbox
aPrint this pages
Post Your Comment     |    aAlert Moderator
Your comment(s) on this article