Cash settlement fundamentally changes the nature of
commodity markets. When traders can enter and exit massive positions without
ever taking delivery, the market becomes unanchored from physical realities.
Price discovery—the core justification for futures markets—suffers. Prices
increasingly reflect sentiment, algorithms, and fund-driven volatility, rather
than real supply–demand conditions. Producers are left navigating distorted
signals; consumers face unpredictable swings that have little to do with harvests,
inventories, or shipping flows.
The ultimate beneficiaries of this system are large
speculators—most notably fund managers—who profit from volatility without any
connection to the underlying commodity. With no storage constraints or delivery
obligations, speculative capital can dominate volumes and dictate market
direction. Meanwhile, genuine hedgers find themselves pushed to the margins of
markets supposedly created for them.
None of this suggests that cash-settled contracts should be
banned overnight. Liquidity matters. But the current balance is unhealthy and
unsustainable. A phased rebalancing is both practical and necessary. Exchanges should
gradually increase the share of physically deliverable contracts, strengthen
warehouse receipt systems, and enforce stricter inventory reporting. Regulators
should impose higher margins on purely speculative cash-settled positions to
curb excessive leverage.
Physical delivery brings discipline. It forces markets to
acknowledge storage capacity, transport costs, stock levels, and real economic
flows. It restores transparency and aligns futures pricing with fundamentals.
More importantly, it reduces the outsized influence of speculative capital on
commodities that are crucial for food security, energy planning, and industrial
production.
Commodity markets must serve the real economy, not the
speculative ambitions of a few. The dominance of cash-settled trading has
diluted that purpose. A deliberate move toward more physically grounded trading
is essential to restore credibility, stability, and fairness in global
commodity markets.

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