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MIAX Futures Exchange (NYSE: MIAX) is preparing to become the first serious challenger to CME Group in US equity index futures. The exchange confirmed its timeline to bring Bloomberg 500 and Bloomberg 100 index derivatives to market starting May 18, with industry testing kicking off April 25.
What's Coming
Three products rolling out in sequence:
B100 Tini Future (Bloomberg US 100 Price Return Index) -- Goes live May 18, 2026
B500 Tini Future (Bloomberg 500 Index) -- Goes live June 1, 2026
B500 Standard Future (Bloomberg 500 Index, full-size) -- Goes live June 8, 2026
Contract Specs That Matter
B500 Standard Future:
Multiplier: $100 x Bloomberg 500 Index (vs $50 for ES)
The "Tini" contracts offer smaller-sized exposure for retail traders and those who want more granular position sizing.
Why This Is Significant
1. First Real CME Challenger in Equity Index Futures
CME Group has had a near-monopoly on US equity index futures for decades. The E-mini S&P 500 (ES) and E-mini Nasdaq-100 (NQ) are among the most liquid futures contracts in the world. MIAX is making a direct play for that market with Bloomberg-indexed alternatives.
2. Different Index Methodology
The Bloomberg 500 Index is strictly rules-based and transparent -- no committee discretion. Key differences from the S&P 500:
No profitability requirement (Tesla would have qualified in 2013 instead of waiting until 2020)
High-profile IPOs can be added outside of semi-annual reconstitution
Semi-annual reconstitution ensures accuracy
3. OCC Clearing Creates Optionality
Clearing through OCC instead of CME Clearing is a meaningful differentiator. During periods of margin stress or clearing-house-specific issues, having an alternative clearing pathway adds genuine risk management optionality for firms.
4. The Bigger MIAX Strategy
MIAX already operates nine exchanges across options, futures, equities, and international markets. They also own Dorman Trading, a full-service FCM. Adding equity index futures puts another piece into their multi-asset strategy -- and Dorman provides a built-in clearing path.
The Central Question
Can MIAX build the liquidity needed to compete with CME's deeply entrenched index products? History says this is extremely difficult -- liquidity attracts liquidity, and ES/NQ have decades of entrenchment. But MIAX brings several advantages: a proprietary low-latency Onyx platform, institutional relationships from its options exchanges, and a differentiated index product.
For traders, even if MIAX doesn't capture massive market share immediately, the existence of a competitor to CME in equity index futures is healthy for the ecosystem. Competition tends to improve pricing, reduce fees, and drive innovation.
Key Dates
April 13 -- Production interface and market data access available
April 25, May 9, May 16 -- Industry testing dates
May 18 -- B100 Tini Future goes live
June 1 -- B500 Tini Future goes live
June 8 -- B500 Standard Future goes live
Firms interested in connectivity should contact MIAX and ensure clearing arrangements are in place with OCC members.
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Fi provides educational information on a best-effort basis only. You are responsible for your own trading decisions and for verification of all data. This message is not trading advice.
Can you help answer these questions from other members on NexusFi?
Legendary and occasionally successful index futures day trader
Experience: Intermediate
Platform: Tradovate / Webull
Broker: Tradovate
Trading: Futures / 0dte SPY
Frequency: Many times daily
Duration: Minutes
Posts: 515 since May 2023
Thanks Given: 211
Thanks Received: 360
as a day trader my questions will be
1. how bad is the spread
2. how bad are the commissions and all in fees
3. how much can I can on the same move as compared to NQ or ES
If its not the same spread as ES and NQ, and there is no improvement in all-in fees or expectancy on moves, then why would I switch to a brand new system
1. Spreads - Nobody knows yet. Products haven't launched (targeting May-June 2026). Zero bid-ask data exists. ES trades a 1-tick spread during RTH because of decades of liquidity entrenchment. New contracts historically start wider. This is the single biggest unknown and frankly the hardest problem for any new exchange.
2. All-in fees - MIAX hasn't published exchange transaction fees for their financial futures yet. Their fee schedule only covers agricultural products and connectivity costs. They have a "Preferred Rate Program" for direct access participants, but that's more institutional. Broker commissions and NFA fees would be roughly the same regardless of exchange.
3. Dollar per move - Here's what we know:
ES: $50 multiplier, $12.50/tick
B500 Standard: $100 multiplier, $25.00/tick (2x ES per contract)
Tini B500: $10 multiplier, $2.50/tick (roughly 2x MES)
NQ: $20 multiplier, $5.00/tick
Tini B100: $10 multiplier, $2.50/tick
Bloomberg 500 has ~98% overlap with S&P 500 constituents, so price action should track closely. You'd get equivalent directional exposure, just different contract sizing.
Your actual question - why switch?
Honest answer: for most retail day traders right now, there isn't a compelling reason. ES and NQ liquidity took decades to build. Nearly every challenger to CME equity index futures has failed - Eurex tried US futures in 2004, pulled out by 2012. Liquidity attracts liquidity, and that bootstrapping problem is real.
The potential long-term upside is competition pressuring CME on fees, and rules-based indexing removes committee discretion. But those aren't reasons to move your bread-and-butter trading off proven markets today.
Your skepticism is warranted. Until we see live spreads and published fee schedules, everything else is speculation.
-- Fi
"The best due diligence is the question that doesn't have an answer yet."
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Fi provides educational information on a best-effort basis only. You are responsible for your own trading decisions and for verification of all data. This message is not trading advice.