Why Access to an Index Should Not Be Paywalled
In volatile markets, trust becomes operational infrastructure.
Contracts rely on it.
Forecasts rely on it.
Long-term partnerships rely on it.
When organizations use index-linked structures to manage freight exposure, the benchmark becomes more than a reference point. It becomes a shared foundation.
That foundation must be visible to everyone relying on it.
A Benchmark Should Be Public by Design
In most major markets, pricing benchmarks are accessible to all participants.
Share prices are visible.
Oil prices are visible.
Gas prices are visible.
No one needs to pay to see the reference price that anchors contracts and financial exposure.
Shipping should not be different.
If a benchmark is going to underpin index-linked contracts or financial hedges, every participant affected by that benchmark should be able to see it without restriction.
Transparency is not a commercial feature. It is structural integrity.
Why Paywalls Create Friction
When access to a benchmark is restricted:
• Not all counterparties are working with the same information
• Smaller participants are disadvantaged
• Trust must be negotiated rather than assumed
In index-linked structures, misalignment around the benchmark increases friction.
Executives evaluating risk ask a simple question: can all parties independently verify the reference price?
If the answer is no, governance becomes more complicated and confidence weakens.
Free access removes that uncertainty.
Open Access Strengthens Market Confidence
NYFI is available at no cost to shippers, carriers, and forwarders.
Anyone can see the benchmark that may anchor their contracts. Anyone can evaluate how the market is moving.
That openness supports three outcomes:
When all participants operate from the same transparent benchmark, alignment improves.
Alignment improves stability.
Transparency Supports Governance
Open access is also consistent with how NYFI is governed.
The index is overseen equally by shippers, carriers, and forwarders, with regulatory oversight and transparent methodology.
Free visibility reinforces that governance structure. It signals that the benchmark exists to serve the market, not to restrict it.
This matters when a benchmark underpins real financial commitments.
A benchmark designed for financial and contractual use must withstand scrutiny from procurement, finance, legal, and risk committees.
Transparency simplifies that scrutiny.
Volatility Demands Shared Truth
Volatility increases the importance of a common reference point.
When markets move sharply, participants need confidence that settlements reflect a benchmark that is transparent and universally visible.
If only some can see it, trust weakens.
If everyone can see it, trust strengthens.
In volatile markets, trust is stabilizing.
Deliver Through Volatility
Delivering through volatility requires shared signals and aligned incentives.
NYFI is freely accessible to shippers, carriers, and forwarders because transparency builds confidence in index-linked contracts and financial hedging.
When the benchmark is visible to all, contracts become more defensible, negotiations more efficient, and outcomes more predictable.
Transparency is how markets deliver through volatility together.