In the US., any of us can get a license to trade securities, commodities futures, options, etc. We can also subscribe to real-time information about the values of these investment vehicles, and there is usually some index associated with the products.
Most futures, however, are based on agricultural and industrial products. Does anyone know why ammo doesn't (or couldn't) have some sort of similar authoritative index that is updated in real-time? Is there some sort of legal red tape that the SEC has put up, or did the SEC just decide that ammo contracts/ammo market value aren't interesting enough to trade/track?
BTW, I found that Ayoob mentions this here.
Most futures, however, are based on agricultural and industrial products. Does anyone know why ammo doesn't (or couldn't) have some sort of similar authoritative index that is updated in real-time? Is there some sort of legal red tape that the SEC has put up, or did the SEC just decide that ammo contracts/ammo market value aren't interesting enough to trade/track?
BTW, I found that Ayoob mentions this here.

) Financial Officer of the 
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