CME Group Inc.
CMEBusiness Model
ticker: CME step: 01 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research
CME Group Inc. (CME) — Business Overview
Business Description
CME Group is the world's largest derivatives marketplace, operating four major exchanges (CME, CBOT, NYMEX, COMEX) and CME Clearing — the dominant US clearinghouse for interest rate, equity index, agricultural, FX, energy, and metals futures + options. CME Globex electronic trading platform serves ~150 countries and has the deepest liquidity pool in global derivatives. The company is structurally positioned as the toll bridge of US financial risk management — every Treasury futures + Eurodollar/SOFR rate hedge + S&P 500 options trade flows through CME's infrastructure. Average daily volume hit an all-time record 30.2M contracts in Q2 2025 (+16% YoY).
Revenue Model
Single reportable segment with six asset class lines:
- Interest Rate (~35% of clearing & transaction revenue) — Eurodollar/SOFR, Treasury futures (2/5/10/30-year), Fed Funds, Ultra T-Bond. Dominant US rates hedging venue.
- Equity Index (~17%) — S&P 500 (E-mini SPX + Micro), Nasdaq 100 futures, Russell, Sector Indices, VIX futures.
- Foreign Exchange (~7%) — Major + emerging market FX futures/options.
- Agricultural Commodities (~10%) — Corn, soybeans, wheat, cattle, hog, dairy futures.
- Energy (~13%) — WTI crude, natural gas (Henry Hub), heating oil, RBOB gasoline.
- Metals (~7%) — Gold, silver, copper futures.
Revenue components: Clearing & Transaction Fees (~75% of revenue) + Market Data (~17%) + Other (incl. CME Group joint ventures, services).
Products & Services
- Globex Electronic Trading Platform: ~150 countries; 24-hour electronic trading.
- CME Clearing: Multi-asset clearinghouse with $145B+ in clearing fund deposits; counterparty risk management.
- Treasury Futures + Cross-Margining: With FICC (DTCC) cross-margining launched April 30, 2026 — saves customers ~$80B in daily margin.
- SOFR Futures: Successor to Eurodollar; dominant short-term rate hedging product post-LIBOR.
- S&P 500 E-mini + Micro: Largest equity index futures market in the world; underlying for most US passive flows.
- CME Securities Clearing: New entity (SEC-approved) for US Treasury cash clearing ahead of regulatory mandate.
- OSTTRA (post-trade processing JV with S&P Global): Recently exited / proceeds being used for buybacks.
Customer Base & Go-to-Market
- Banks + dealers: All major global investment banks use CME for proprietary + client-flow hedging.
- Asset managers + hedge funds: All material US-focused investors use CME for equity + rate + commodity exposure.
- Corporates: Use CME for FX, commodity, and rate hedging.
- Retail brokers + traders: Retail futures + micro contracts (E-mini Micros, Micro Bitcoin).
- Governments + central banks: Use CME for sovereign rate management.
Distribution: Direct exchange access through clearing member firms (FCMs); retail via traditional brokers + futures platforms.
Competitive Position
CME is the dominant derivatives exchange globally with structural moats unmatched in financial services:
- Network effects + liquidity — Liquidity attracts liquidity; once a contract has critical mass, it's extremely difficult to dislodge (CME's SOFR + Treasury futures + E-mini SPX are virtually unchallengeable).
- Cross-margining + clearing efficiency — CME Clearing offsets across asset classes (Treasury futures vs. SOFR, etc.); customers save margin by clearing on a single venue. The new CME-FICC client cross-margining launched April 30, 2026 deepens this moat.
- Treasury futures dominance — ~98% market share globally; CME-FICC cross-margining + CME Securities Clearing further entrench this advantage as the US Treasury clearing mandate takes effect.
- Equity index dominance — S&P 500 E-mini is THE liquid equity-index derivative; underlying for virtually all S&P 500 passive flows + structured products.
- Operating margin >65% — Among the highest of any public company; the toll-bridge economic model.
Competitive challenges:
- ICE (Intercontinental Exchange) — Direct competitor in select asset classes; Brent crude futures dominance; NYSE listings; CDS clearing.
- Eurex (Deutsche Boerse) — European interest rate futures (Bund, Euribor); limited US competition.
- MarketAxess + Tradeweb — Electronic fixed-income trading (cash, not futures).
- DTCC (FICC) for Treasury cash clearing — New CME Securities Clearing competes directly.
Key Facts
- Founded: 2007 (CBOT-CME merger); CBOT 1848
- Headquarters: Chicago, Illinois
- Employees: ~3,400
- Exchange: NASDAQ
- Sector / Industry: Financials / Capital Markets
- Market Cap: ~$95B
- FY2025 Revenue: $6.51B (+6.3%)
- FY2025 Net Income: $4.02B (+15.5%)
- Annual ADV (FY24): 26.9M contracts
- Q2 2025 ADV (record): 30.2M contracts (+16%)
- 2026 Variable Dividend: $6.15/share (~$2.2B); plus $1.30 quarterly regular
- Total 2025 Dividend: ~$4.0B (~4.2% yield)
- Buyback Authorization: $3B opportunistic
- Operating Margin: ~65%+
- 2026 Adjusted Operating Expense Guide: $1.695B
- 2026 Capex Guide: $85M (asset-light)
- 2026 Tax Rate: 23.5–24.5%
Financial Snapshot
ticker: CME step: 04 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research
CME Group Inc. (CME) — Financial Snapshot
Income Statement Summary
| Metric | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 | YoY (FY25) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $5.58B | $6.13B | $6.51B | +6.3% |
| Clearing & Transaction Fees | $4.6B | $5.1B | $5.4B | +6% |
| Market Data Revenue | $0.74B | $0.78B | $0.83B | +6% |
| Adjusted Operating Margin | 63% | 64% | 65%+ | +100 bps |
| GAAP Operating Margin | ~60% | ~63% | ~63% | flat |
| Adjusted Net Income | $3.34B | $3.67B | $4.02B | +9.7% |
| Adjusted Diluted EPS | $9.24 | $10.13 | $11.06 | +9.2% |
Volume Metrics
| Metric | FY2024 | FY2025 | Trends |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual ADV (millions of contracts) | 26.9 | record | Q2 2025 record at 30.2M (+16%) |
| Interest Rate ADV | record | record | all-time records 3 consecutive years |
| Equity Index ADV | strong | record | volatility-driven |
| Commodity ADV | strong | +15% sector growth | broad-based |
Cash Flow & Capital Allocation (FY2025)
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Operating Cash Flow | ~$4.5B |
| Capital Expenditures | ~$70M (asset-light) |
| Free Cash Flow | ~$4.4B |
| Total Capital Returned in 2025 (incl. variable div + buybacks) | ~$4.0B |
| 2025 Annual Variable Dividend (declared Feb 2026) | $6.15/share (~$2.2B) |
| Q1 2026 Regular Dividend | $1.30 (quarterly) |
| Annual Regular Dividend | $5.20 |
| Total Annual Dividend Yield (regular + variable) | ~4.2% |
| Q4 2025 Buyback | $256M |
| YTD 2026 Buyback | $276M+ (using OSTTRA proceeds) |
| Buyback Authorization | $3B opportunistic |
FY2026 Guidance
| Metric | 2026 Guide |
|---|---|
| Adjusted Operating Expenses (ex-license fees) | ~$1.695B |
| Capital Expenditures | ~$85M |
| Tax Rate | 23.5–24.5% |
| Pricing/Fee Changes | +1.0–1.5% expected revenue impact |
| Major Initiative | CME-FICC client cross-margining launched April 30, 2026; CME Securities Clearing for Treasury cash |
Key Ratios (approximate)
- P/E: ~24x (FY26 adjusted EPS ~$11.50) | EV/EBITDA: ~18x | FCF Yield: ~4.6%
- Revenue Growth (FY25): +6.3% | FCF Margin: ~68%
- Adjusted Operating Margin: 65%+ (industry-best)
- Total Capital Return Yield: ~4.2% (regular $5.20 + variable $6.15 = ~$11.35 annual)
- ROIC: 60%+ (asset-light + clearing fund structure)
Growth Profile
FY25 was a record year:
- Revenue +6.3% to $6.51B
- Adjusted EPS +9.2% to $11.06
- Net Income +15.5% to $4.02B
- Q2 2025 ADV record 30.2M contracts (+16%)
- All six asset classes hitting volume records
The structural story is financial-risk infrastructure monopoly:
- Interest rate futures volumes structurally rising with debt cycles + Fed activity
- CME-FICC cross-margining (April 30, 2026 launch) saves customers ~$80B daily margin — defends Treasury futures dominance against any potential FICC competition
- CME Securities Clearing (Treasury cash) entry leverages clearing-network effects into adjacent market
FY26 setup: continued mid-single-digit revenue growth + operating leverage + variable dividend program supports ~5%+ total capital return yield + multiple expansion as recurring revenue mix grows.
Forward Estimates
FY2026 (Consensus):
- Revenue: ~$6.9–7.0B (+6%)
- Adjusted EPS: ~$11.50–12.00 (+4–8%)
Bull case: Volumes accelerate further on continued rate volatility + Treasury debt issuance + equity flows; multiple expands to 28x P/E. Bear case: 2026 rates cycle normalizes + interest rate hedging volume declines; multiple compresses to 20x P/E. Consensus targets ~$285–315 vs. trading ~$255–275 (~10–25% implied upside).
Recent Catalysts
ticker: CME step: 12 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research
CME Group Inc. (CME) — Investment Catalysts & Risks
Bull Case Drivers
- Q2 2025 ADV record 30.2M contracts (+16% YoY) — All-time quarterly volume record across all six asset classes; structural demand for risk management at scale. Interest rate futures hit records 3 consecutive years.
- CME-FICC cross-margining launched April 30, 2026 — Saves customers ~$80B in average daily margin; structurally entrenches Treasury futures + SOFR dominance against any FICC competition.
- CME Securities Clearing — new Treasury cash clearing — SEC-approved; launches ahead of US Treasury clearing mandate. Extends CME's clearing-network advantage into cash markets.
- Operating margin 65%+ — industry-best — One of the highest operating margins of any public company; structurally compounding on each incremental dollar of volume.
- ~4.2% combined total dividend yield (regular + variable) — $1.30/qtr regular + $6.15 annual variable = $11.35/year; predictable + scaling capital return program.
- Treasury futures + SOFR + E-mini SPX near-monopolies — Network effects + liquidity moats; impossible for competitors to dislodge.
- $3B opportunistic buyback authorization — Combined with OSTTRA proceeds; additional buyback firepower.
- Rate volatility tailwind from Fed + global debt cycle — Treasury debt issuance + Fed rate path uncertainty + global debt levels structurally support higher hedging activity.
- Asset-light model + ROIC 60%+ — Minimal capex ($85M FY26); near-pure operating leverage.
Bear Case Risks
- Interest rate volatility cycle normalization — Most of CME's 2024–25 volume surge came from Fed-policy uncertainty + Treasury issuance. As rate policy stabilizes and Fed completes its cycle, IR derivatives volumes could decelerate sharply (rates derivatives are ~35% of revenue).
- ICE + Eurex competitive pressure on specific products — While CME has near-monopolies in US Treasury + SOFR, ICE has Brent + CDS clearing. Eurex has Bund/Euribor European rate dominance.
- Treasury cash clearing mandate execution risk — CME Securities Clearing is a new business line; ramp + competitive response from DTCC (FICC incumbent) + potential pricing pressure.
- Pricing constraints in concentrated derivatives market — Regulatory scrutiny on fee levels for systemically important clearinghouses; pricing power capped longer-term.
- Equity volatility regime change — Lower realized + implied volatility compresses equity-index futures volume (S&P E-mini); 2026 has been more volatile but normalization is a tail risk.
- Premium valuation (~24x FY26 P/E) — Multiple already prices in CME's monopoly economics; limited upside on multiple expansion.
- Crypto / decentralized derivatives long-term — Decentralized derivatives platforms (dYdX, Hyperliquid, GMX) gaining institutional traction; centralized exchanges face long-term disruption from blockchain settlement.
- OSTTRA exit removes a growth lever — Sold OSTTRA stake to S&P Global; while accretive for buybacks, removes potential future value.
Upcoming Events
- Q2 2026 earnings (early August 2026): Mid-year volume trends + CME-FICC cross-margining adoption.
- CME Securities Clearing launch: Treasury cash clearing rollout pre-2027 mandate.
- CME-FICC cross-margining (April 30, 2026 — already launched): Adoption metrics.
- Q4 2026 earnings (early February 2027): 2026 annual variable dividend declaration.
- Quarterly ADV announcements: Monthly volume disclosures via CME press releases.
- Fed meetings + Treasury auction calendar: Major rate-volatility drivers.
- Equity volatility (VIX) trajectory: Drives equity index volume.
Analyst Sentiment
Consensus rating is Buy / Overweight (~70% Buy, 28% Hold, 2% Sell). Price targets cluster $285–315 vs. trading ~$255–275 (~10–25% implied upside). Bull case targets ~$340 on continued rate volatility + cross-margining + variable dividend; bear case ~$220 on volume normalization + multiple compression. Bernstein, Morgan Stanley, JPM, BMO maintain Buy/Overweight; Wells Fargo at Overweight; UBS at Neutral on valuation; Goldman at Buy.
Research Date
Generated: 2026-05-12
Full Research Available
This primer covers steps 1–3 of 21. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, returns on capital, institutional/insider activity, and an investment memo.