RapidSP features
List of technical indicators & studies
available in RapidSP
Resources
Detailed description
of technical indicators and studies offered in RapidSP
FAQs
Knowledgebase/articles
RapidSP
user testimonials
|
Futures Trading Terms
Futures trades take place at any of a number of centralized
exchanges, often in open-outcry auction-style trading pits, but
electronic trade-matching platforms (such as the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange's Globex system, for example), are growing in importance
every year. In every transaction, the exchange clearinghouse is
substituted as the buyer to the seller and the seller to the buyer,
thereby guaranteeing performance and eliminating counter party risk.
Buying a futures contract is called taking a "long" position.
Selling a futures contract is referred to as taking a "short"
position. A long futures position profits when the futures price
goes up, and a short futures position profits when the futures price
goes down. Maturing futures contracts expire on specific dates,
usually during the contract month. At any time before the contract
matures, the trader may offset, or close out, his or her obligation
by selling what was previously bought or buying what was previously
sold
Hedgers and Speculators
Futures market participants may be divided into two broad categories:
Hedgers, who actually deal in the underlying commodity or financial
instrument and seek to protect themselves against adverse price
fluctuations, and speculators (including professional floor traders),
who seek to profit from price swings. The futures markets exist
to facilitate the management of risk and are thus used extensively
by hedgers - individuals or businesses who have exposure to the
price of an agricultural commodity, or currency, or interest rates
and take futures positions designed to mitigate their risks. This
requires the hedger to take a futures position opposite to that
of his or her position in the actual commodity or financial instrument.
Speculators or day-trader are attracted to futures trading because
they see the opportunity to profit from price swing in instruments.
Speculators take advantage of the fact that the futures markets
offer them access to price movements; the ability to offset their
obligations prior to delivery; high leverage (low margin requirements);
low transaction costs; and ease of assuming short as well as long
positions. In pursuit of trading profits, speculators willingly
take risks that hedgers wish to transfer. In this process, speculators
provide the liquidity that assures low transaction costs and reliable
price discovery, market characteristics that, in turn, make futures
markets attractive to hedgers.
Margin
Customers who trade futures are required to post margin deposits
with an exchange member firm, which, in turn, must deposit margin
with the exchange. Margins are not payment against the market value
of the instrument, but rather, are a performance bond -- a good-faith
deposit -- to ensure the ability of market participants to honor
their financial commitments. To minimize this risk, the exchange
demands that contract owners post a form of collateral, known as
margin. The amount of margin changes each day, involving movements
of cash handled by the exchange's clearing house.
Initial margin is paid by both buyer and seller. It represents the
loss on that contract, as determined by historical price changes,
that is not likely to be exceeded on a usual day's trading.
Because a series of adverse price changes may exhaust the initial
margin, a further margin, usually called variation or maintenance
margin, is required by the exchange. Maintenance margin is the minimum
amount of equity that must be maintained in a margin account to
ensure against default, i.e. minimum good faith deposit.
Leverage
In the futures market, leverage refers to having control over large
cash amounts of commodities with comparatively small levels of capital.
In other words, with a relatively small amount of cash, you can
enter into a futures contract that is worth much more than you initially
have to pay (deposit into your margin account). It is said that
in the futures market, more than any other form of investment, price
changes are highly leveraged; meaning a small change in a futures
price can translate into a huge gain or loss.
Delivery
Delivery is the act of actually delivering (for sales) or accepting
delivery (for purchases) of the underlying contract after trading
has ceased.
There are two main methods of delivery:
Cash delivery—settling against an agreed reference rate such
as the closing value of a stock index.
Physical delivery—where the amount specified of the underlying
asset of the contract is delivered by a seller of the contract to
the exchange, and by the exchange to buyers of the contract.
Contract
There are many different kinds of futures contract, reflecting
the many different kinds of tradeable assets of which they are derivatives.
For e.g. E-mini S&P500, E-mini Nasdaq, Soybean,Wheat Gold Etc
.Originally, futures contracts were traded only on commodities,
in a market dominated by the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME).
However, after their introduction in the 1970s, contracts on financial
instruments became hugely successful and quickly overtook commodities
futures in terms of trading volume and global accessibility to the
markets.
Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) -- financials (bonds), maize, oats,
Chicago Mercantile Exchange -- financial futures, lumber, live cattle,
feeder cattle,
International Petroleum Exchange - energy including crude oil, heating
oil, natural gas
London Commodity Exchange - softs, grains and meats
New York Board of Trade - Softs : cotton, orange juice, sugar
New York Mercantile Exchange - Energy and metals: crude oil, heating
oil,
Pricing and Limits
Contracts in the futures market are a result of competitive price
discovery. Prices are quoted, as they would be in the cash market:
in dollars and cents or per unit (gold ounces, index points). Prices
on futures contracts have a minimum amount that they can move. These
minimums are established by the futures exchanges, are known as
“ticks.”
For futures traders, it's important to understand how the minimum
price movement for each instrument will affect the size of the contract.
Futures prices also have a price change limit that determines the
prices between which the contracts can trade on a daily basis. The
price change limit is added to and subtracted from the previous
day's close, and the results remain the upper and lower price boundary
for the day.
The exchange can revise this price limit if it feels it's necessary.
It's not uncommon for the exchange to abolish daily price limits
in the month that the contract expires (delivery or “spot”
month). This is because trading is often volatile during this month,
as sellers and buyers try to obtain the best price possible before
the expiration of the contract. In order to avoid any unfair advantages,
the CTFC and the futures exchanges impose limits on the total amount
of contracts or units of a instrument in which any single person
can invest. These are known as position limits and they ensure that
no one person can control the market price for a particular commodity.
Volume and Open Interest
Volume and open interest are measures to determine the liquidity
of a futures market - the more liquid a market, the faster and easier
that trades can be executed. Volume is a running count of the number
of futures transactions that have occurred during the day, whether
a buy or a sell. It is the number of futures contracts that have
changed hands. Open interest is the number of futures contracts
outstanding, that is, that have not been closed or offset. Official
volume and open interest figures are calculated and disseminated
by futures exchanges at the end of the trading day, and usually
printed in newspapers along with futures prices.
Quotes
A trader needs to have a source of futures prices. Prices are supplied
by futures exchanges and are also available on the Internet.To get
up-to-the-minute futures prices, you need to subscribe to a news
vendor such as Reuters or Telerate.
Contract Abbreviations
Industry abbreviations exist both for the type of futures contract
and the trading month. For instance, a E-mini s&p futures contract
traded on CME and expiring in September 2005 is abbreviated as ESU5
where ES represents the E-mini s&p futures, U represents the
month of September, and 5 is the last digit in the expiration year,
2005.
|
|