What is COMEX?
COMEX, the Commodity Exchange, is a division of the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX), which itself is part of the CME Group β the world's largest derivatives marketplace. COMEX is the primary global venue for trading gold, silver, copper, and aluminum futures contracts.
Founded in 1933 through the merger of four smaller commodity exchanges in New York, COMEX has grown to become the world's most liquid gold futures market. Today, it processes hundreds of thousands of gold contracts daily, with each standard contract representing 100 troy ounces of gold.
How COMEX Works
COMEX operates as a futures exchange, where buyers and sellers agree to trade a standardized quantity of gold at a specified price on a future date. The standard gold futures contract (GC) covers 100 troy ounces, while the E-micro contract (MGC) covers 10 troy ounces, making it accessible to smaller traders.
Trading occurs electronically through the CME Globex platform nearly 24 hours a day, six days a week. The most actively traded contract is typically the nearest delivery month, known as the "front month" contract. As each contract approaches its delivery date, traders either take physical delivery or roll their positions to the next month.
While COMEX is primarily a paper trading market, it maintains significant physical gold inventories in approved vaults across the New York metropolitan area. These vaults currently hold hundreds of millions of ounces of gold, categorized as either "registered" (available for delivery) or "eligible" (meets exchange specifications but not yet designated for delivery).
COMEX as a Global Benchmark
The COMEX gold price serves as the primary benchmark for gold pricing worldwide. When financial media report "gold prices," they typically reference the COMEX front-month futures price. This benchmark status means that gold prices in virtually every other market are directly or indirectly influenced by COMEX trading activity.
The price difference between COMEX and other exchanges (such as SGE, MCX, or LBMA) is what creates the "premium" or "discount" that tools like GoldSilver Tracker monitor. For example, if gold trades at $2,000 on COMEX but at the equivalent of $2,060 on India's MCX, the premium is 3%.
Key Contract Specifications
- Contract Size: 100 troy ounces (standard GC), 10 troy ounces (E-micro MGC)
- Price Quote: USD per troy ounce
- Minimum Tick: $0.10 per troy ounce ($10 per contract)
- Trading Hours: Sunday-Friday, 6:00 PM - 5:00 PM ET (nearly 23 hours)
- Delivery Months: February, April, June, August, October, December
COMEX vs. Spot Price
The COMEX futures price and the spot (cash) price of gold are closely related but not identical. The futures price typically trades at a slight premium to spot, reflecting carrying costs such as storage, insurance, and financing. This difference is called the "basis" or "contango."
In normal market conditions, the basis is small and predictable. However, during periods of market stress β such as the March 2020 COVID-19 crisis β the basis can widen dramatically as disruptions in physical delivery logistics create temporary dislocations between paper and physical gold markets.
Why COMEX Matters for Investors
Understanding COMEX is essential for anyone interested in gold markets because it sets the global reference price. Changes in COMEX trading volume, open interest (the number of outstanding contracts), and vault inventories can signal shifts in market sentiment. For instance, rising open interest alongside rising prices suggests new money flowing into gold, while declining open interest may indicate a weakening trend.
COMEX data is freely available and widely analyzed by traders, making it an invaluable resource for understanding global gold market dynamics.
π Key Takeaways
- COMEX is the world's most liquid gold futures market, part of CME Group
- The standard contract (GC) covers 100 troy ounces; E-micro (MGC) covers 10 troy ounces
- COMEX sets the global benchmark β when media says "gold price," they mean COMEX
- The difference between COMEX and other exchanges creates the premiums/discounts this tool tracks
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