--NYSE Euronext and CBOE gain exclusive rights to list Russell 2000 options

--Highlights growing importance of index and exchange partnerships

--Adds Russell to CBOE's portfolio of exclusive rights on S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average index options

(Updates with details throughout.)

 
   By Kaitlyn Kiernan and Jacob Bunge 
 

NEW YORK--NYSE Euronext (NYX) and CBOE Holdings Inc. (CBOE) are getting exclusive rights to list options on Russell Investments' stock indexes, the two exchange operators and the indexing company announced Friday.

The dual-listing partnership will begin in April, allowing the options exchanges of NYSE Amex and Arca and the Chicago Board Options Exchange to list options tied to Russell indexes, including contracts on the widely followed Russell 2000 index of small-capitalization stocks. Russell Investments is part of Russell Investment Group, a subsidiary of Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co.

Index options are contracts that allow investors to wager on the rise and fall of stock indexes. Rather than being tied to shares, the contracts are "cash settled," meaning if options are profitable at expiration, investors receive the cash difference between the option "strike" price and the current value of the index. Such options are commonly used as porfolio hedges in case of broad market declines.

Russell Investments Chief Executive Ron Bundy, NYSE Euronext head of U.S. options Steve Crutchfield and a spokeswoman for CBOE declined to comment on the licensing fees or other financial terms of the agreement.

The deals between Russell and CBOE and Russell and NYSE Euronext were negotiated separately, according to a person familiar with the process. The agreements highlight the continued importance of indexes to exchanges, which have jockeyed to partner with or buy index providers in recent years. Close ties with indexes allow exchanges to build franchises in trading derivatives linked to stock benchmarks and tap revenue from a growing roster of tradable funds tied to indexes.

Options on the Russell 2000 were previously listed on several U.S. exchanges. Over the past month, index options on the Russell 2000 traded an average of about 74,000 contracts daily. That compares with about 832,000 daily contracts tied to the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index and 4,300 contracts tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

The deal follows previous alliances Russell has struck with exchanges to trade and distribute products built around its small-cap benchmark. In January, NYSE Euronext secured the right to broadcast Russell stock-index data to traders, moving the systems calculating the valuation of the Russell 2000 and other indexes to the Big Board parent's New Jersey data center.

"Each of the two exchange operators bring their own strengths to the table, and we expect those strengths will help build volume," said Mr. Bundy. "By increasing the focus and concentrating the trading in fewer exchanges, we expect to see deeper, more-liquid markets that will benefit traders and investors."

The deal also follows NYSE Euronext's December agreement to be taken over by fellow exchange operator IntercontinentalExchange Inc. (ICE) in a roughly $8.2 billion cash-and-stock deal. ICE already maintains exclusive rights to trade futures linked to the Russell 2000 index, a contract it won from larger rival CME Group Inc. (CME) in 2007.

CBOE maintains exclusive rights to list options on the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Standard & Poor's 500-stock index. The S&P 500 contracts are CBOE's most popular products and are still traded mostly on the exchange's Chicago-based floor.

That exclusive partnership with McGraw-Hill Cos.'s (MHP) S&P Dow Jones Indices has been the subject of legal battles with Deutsche Boerse AG's (DBOEF, DB1.XE) International Securities Exchange in past years. ISE has in court contested the CBOE's exclusive listings of options linked to the two widely followed U.S. indexes.

An Illinois court in November blocked ISE from listing options similar to CBOE's contracts on the S&P 500.

A spokesman for the ISE declined to comment.

On Friday, about 35% of Russell 2000 index options traded on the ISE, while another 16% traded on Nasdaq OMX Group Inc.'s (NDAQ) PHLX trading venue in Philadelphia. The remaining volume was split between the Amex, Arca and CBOE exchanges.

"A healthy chunk of business currently takes place on other exchanges, but that is good news for us," said Mr. Crutchfield, head of U.S. options at NYSE Euronext. "We are confident both our exchanges will offer a strong value proposition to win business."

NYSE Euronext's U.S. futures platform also has an agreement to trade futures linked to indexes compiled by MSCI Inc. (MSCI). Trading in MSCI-linked contracts on NYSE Euronext's platform last year reached a record average of 20,000 contracts a day, a 67% increase over 2011, the exchange reported in January.

-Saabira Chaudhuri contributed to this article

Write to Kaitlyn Kiernan at kaitlyn.kiernan@dowjones.com and Jacob Bunge at jacob.bunge@dowjones.com

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