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CME E-Mini S&P 500, E-Mini Nasdaq 100 Futures Set Volume Records

Date 15/02/2001

Trading volume in E-mini S&P 500 and E-mini Nasdaq 100 futures rose to new record levels on Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. yesterday, as 138,187 E-mini S&P 500 futures and 126,045 E-mini Nasdaq 100 futures changed hands.

The new records surpass those set on Oct. 10, 2000 and Jan. 10, 2001, when 132,063 E-mini S&P 500 and 117,021 E-rnini Nasdaq 100 futures contracts were traded.

Both E-rnini equity index futures contracts - the fastest growing contracts in the history of the exchange - are traded electronically on CME's GLOBEX®2 trading system and are smaller-sized versions of contracts traded actively via open outcry on the exchange's trading floor. E-mini index trading occurs virtually around the clock from 3:45 p.m. until 3:15 p.rn. the following day.

Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. (www.cme.com) is an international marketplace that brings together buyers and sellers on its trading floors and GLOBEX2 around-the-clock electronic trading system. CME offers futures contracts and options on futures primarily in four product areas: interest rates, stock indexes, foreign currencies and agricultural commodities. On Nov. 13, 2000, CME finalized its transformation into a for-profit, shareholder-owned corporation as it became the first U.S. financial exchange to demutualize by converting its membership interests into shares of common stock that can trade separately from exchange trading privileges. The exchange moves about $1 billion per day in settlement payments, manages $25 billion in collateral deposits and administers more than $1 billion of letters of credit.