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Eight-chapter deep dive on the brand-new compute futures market. CME + Silicon Data launched May 2026; ICE + Ornn followed. Treating GPU-time as a tradeable commodity changes hedging, capital structures, and the long-term shape of the industry.
Scope & audience
What compute futures are, how the two major exchanges (CME + Silicon Data, ICE + Ornn) are structured, how contracts work mechanically, who uses them (hedgers vs speculators), the risks and open questions, and the longer-term implications for the neocloud industry.
Key framings to carry
- Compute futures are a 2026 phenomenon. The CME announcement on May 12, 2026 is the watershed. Anything written before then about compute as a financial commodity is speculative; from now on it's a thing.
- The commodity analogy is imperfect. GPUs depreciate, generations roll over (H100 → H200 → B200 → Rubin), and there's no spot price aggregator with the depth of oil or wheat markets. The contract design is genuinely novel.
- The biggest impact is on neoclouds, not traders. Hedging revenue and locking forward compute changes capital structure for neoclouds and procurement strategy for AI buyers. The financial-market participation is downstream of those use cases.
Reading order
01 (what they are) → 02 (commodity analogy) → 03–04 (CME and ICE) → 05 (mechanics) → 06 (use cases) → 07 (risks) → 08 (future).