Oil, gold, and corn have traded on exchanges for years. In December 2020, water joined them.
That month, CME Group and Nasdaq launched the first water futures in the U.S. They let investors bet on the price of California water without touching a drop.
What CME actually launched
The contract has a long name: Nasdaq Veles California Water Index futures. Its ticker is NQH2O.
It doesn't track a stock or a barrel of oil. It tracks the price of water rights.
That made it the first water futures market in the country. Before it, water had no single public price.
Each contract stands for 10 acre-feet of water. That's about what a couple of homes use in a year.
The trade settles in cash. So no one ships you a reservoir, and the two sides just swap the price difference.
Never traded one? A futures contract is just a deal to buy or sell something at a set price by a set date.
We track the markets most investors never think about, like water, every morning in Market Briefs, and joining gets you a free investing masterclass too.
Where the price comes from
The futures sit on top of an index that started in 2018. Each week, that index sets one price.
It averages real water sales across California's five busiest markets. The data comes from a firm that values water rights for a living.
Why California? The state runs one of the most active water markets around. About 40% of its water irrigates roughly nine million acres of crops.
At launch, CME put that market at about $1.1 billion. That's big enough to need a price of its own.
Water is also heavy and costly to move. So its price swings a lot from one region to the next.
Who it was built for
The pitch was never "get rich on water." It was risk control.
It works like an airline locking in jet fuel before prices jump. A farmer, city, or factory can fix a water price ahead of time.
That smooths out a bill that can swing hard from year to year. A CME executive framed it as a tool for a world facing more water stress.
Each contract settles every quarter against the weekly index. Traders never take delivery of real water.
Most water still trades close to home. That keeps the market small, and few users have jumped in.
Still, the price it sets gets watched far beyond California. A dry year out West now shows up on a screen in New York.
Worth Noting
Water futures were sold as a hedge, not a payday. But a live price changes how people see an asset.
Once something trades with a ticker, investors watch it like oil. That's why water now sits on the same screen as every other commodity.
For investors, it's one more alternative investment to learn before the crowd does.
Want the daily read that explains moves like this in five minutes? Join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs and get a free 45-minute investing course when you sign up.
