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Table of Contents:
- Introduction
- Futures Markets: What, Why
& Who
- The Market Participants
- What is a Futures Contract?
- The Process of Price
Discovery
- After the Closing Bell
- The Arithmetic of Futures
- Trading
- Margins
- Basic Trading Strategies
- Buying (Going Long) to Profit
from an Expected Price Increase Selling
- (Going Short) to Profit from
an Expected Price Decrease Spreads
- What to Look for in a Futures
Contract
- The Contract Unit
- How Prices are Quoted
- Minimum Price Changes
- Daily Price Limits
- Position Limits
- Understanding (and Managing)
the Risks of Futures Trading
- Choosing a Futures Contract
- Liquidity
- Timing
- Stop Orders
- Spreads
- Options on Futures Contracts
- Buying Call Options
- Buying Put Options
- How Option Premiums are
Determined
- Selling Options
- In Closing
INTRODUCTION
Futures markets have been described as continuous auction markets
and as clearing houses for the latest information about supply and
demand. They are the meeting places of buyers and sellers of an
ever-expanding list of commodities that today includes agricultural
products, metals, petroleum, financial instruments, foreign currencies
and stock indexes. Trading has also been initiated in options on
futures contracts, enabling option buyers to participate in futures
markets with known risks.
Notwithstanding the rapid growth and diversification of futures
markets, their primary purpose remains the same as it has been for
nearly a century and a half, to provide an efficient and effective
mechanism for the management of price risks. By buying or selling
futures contracts--contracts that establish a price level now for
items to be delivered later--individuals and businesses seek to
achieve what amounts to insurance against adverse price changes. This
is called hedging.
Volume has increased from 14 million futures contracts traded in
1970 to 179 million futures and options on futures contracts traded in
1985.
Other futures market participants are speculative investors who
accept the risks that hedgers wish to avoid. Most speculators have no
intention of making or taking delivery of the commodity but, rather,
seek to profit from a change in the price. That is, they buy when they
anticipate rising prices and sell when they anticipate declining
prices. The interaction of hedgers and speculators helps to provide
active, liquid and competitive markets. Speculative participation in
futures trading has become increasingly attractive with the
availability of alternative methods of participation. Whereas many
futures traders continue to prefer to make their own trading
decisions--such as what to buy and sell and when to buy and
sell--others choose to utilize the services of a professional trading
advisor, or to avoid day-to-day trading responsibilities by
establishing a fully managed trading account or participating in a
commodity pool which is similar in concept to a mutual fund.
For those individuals who fully understand and can afford the risks
which are involved, the allocation of some portion of their capital to
futures trading can provide a means of achieving greater
diversification and a potentially higher overall rate of return on
their investments. There are also a number of ways in which futures
can be used in combination with stocks, bonds and other investments.
Speculation in futures contracts, however, is clearly not
appropriate for everyone. Just as it is possible to realize
substantial profits in a short period of time, it is also possible to
incur substantial losses in a short period of time. The possibility of
large profits or losses in relation to the initial commitment of
capital stems principally from the fact that futures trading is a
highly leveraged form of speculation. Only a relatively small amount
of money is required to control assets having a much greater value. As
we will discuss and illustrate, the leverage of futures trading can
work for you when prices move in the direction you anticipate or
against you when prices move in the opposite direction.
It is not the purpose of this brochure to suggest that you
should--or should not--participate in futures trading. That is a
decision you should make only after consultation with your broker or
financial advisor and in light of your own financial situation and
objectives.
Intended to help provide you with the kinds of information you
should first obtain--and the questions you should seek answers to--in
regard to any investment you are considering:
* Information about the investment itself and the risks involved
* How readily your investment or position can be liquidated when
such action is necessary or desired
* Who the other market participants are
* Alternate methods of participation
* How prices are arrived at
* The costs of trading
* How gains and losses are realized
* What forms of regulation and protection exist
* The experience, integrity and track record of your broker or
advisor
* The financial stability of the firm with which you are dealing
In sum, the information you need to be an informed investor.
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FUTURES MARKET
The frantic shouting and signaling of bids and offers on the
trading floor of a futures exchange undeniably convey an impression of
chaos. The reality however, is that chaos is what futures markets
replaced. Prior to the establishment of central grain markets in the
mid-nineteenth century, the nation farmers carted their newly
harvested crops over plank roads to major population and
transportation centers each fall in search of buyers. The seasonal
glut drove prices to giveaway levels and, indeed, to throwaway levels
as grain often rotted in the streets or was dumped in rivers and lakes
for lack of storage. Come spring, shortages frequently developed and
foods made from corn and wheat became barely affordable luxuries.
Throughout the year, it was each buyer and seller for himself with
neither a place nor a mechanism for organized, competitive bidding.
The first central markets were formed to meet that need. Eventually,
contracts were entered into for forward as well as for spot
(immediate) delivery. So-called forwards were the forerunners of
present day futures contracts.
Spurred by the need to manage price and interest rate risks that
exist in virtually every type of modern business, today's futures
markets have also become major financial markets. Participants include
mortgage bankers as well as farmers, bond dealers as well as grain
merchants, and multinational corporations as well as food processors,
savings and loan associations, and individual speculators.
Futures prices arrived at through competitive bidding are
immediately and continuously relayed around the world by wire and
satellite. A farmer in Nebraska, a merchant in Amsterdam, an importer
in Tokyo and a speculator in Ohio thereby have simultaneous access to
the latest market-derived price quotations. And, should they choose,
they can establish a price level for future delivery--or for
speculative purposes--simply by having their broker buy or sell the
appropriate contracts. Images created by the fast-paced activity of
the trading floor notwithstanding, regulated futures markets are a
keystone of one of the world's most orderly envied and intensely
competitive marketing systems. Should you at some time decide to trade
in futures contracts, either for speculation or in connection with a
risk management strategy, your orders to buy or sell would be
communicated by phone from the brokerage office you use and then to
the trading pit or ring for execution by a floor broker. If you are a
buyer, the broker will seek a seller at the lowest available price. If
you are a seller, the broker will seek a buyer at the highest
available price. That's what the shouting and signaling is about.
In either case, the person who takes the opposite side of your
trade may be or may represent someone who is a commercial hedger or
perhaps someone who is a public speculator. Or, quite possibly, the
other party may be an independent floor trader. In becoming acquainted
with futures markets, it is useful to have at least a general
understanding of who these various market participants are, what they
are doing and why.
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Hedgers
The details of hedging can be somewhat complex but the principle is
simple. Hedgers are individuals and firms that make purchases and
sales in the futures market solely for the purpose of establishing a
known price level--weeks or months in advance--for something they
later intend to buy or sell in the cash market (such as at a grain
elevator or in the bond market). In this way they attempt to protect
themselves against the risk of an unfavorable price change in the
interim. Or hedgers may use futures to lock in an acceptable margin
between their purchase cost and their selling price. Consider this
example:
A jewelry manufacturer will need to buy additional gold from his
supplier in six months. Between now and then, however, he fears the
price of gold may increase. That could be a problem because he has
already published his catalog for a year ahead.
To lock in the price level at which gold is presently being quoted
for delivery in six months, he buys a futures contract at a price of,
say, $350 an ounce.
If, six months later, the cash market price of gold has risen to
$370, he will have to pay his supplier that amount to acquire gold.
However, the extra $20 an ounce cost will be offset by a $20 an ounce
profit when the futures contract bought at $350 is sold for $370. In
effect, the hedge provided insurance against an increase in the price
of gold. It locked in a net cost of $350, regardless of what happened
to the cash market price of gold. Had the price of gold declined
instead of risen, he would have incurred a loss on his futures
position but this would have been offset by the lower cost of
acquiring gold in the cash market.
The number and variety of hedging possibilities is practically
limitless. A cattle feeder can hedge against a decline in livestock
prices and a meat packer or supermarket chain can hedge against an
increase in livestock prices. Borrowers can hedge against higher
interest rates, and lenders against lower interest rates. Investors
can hedge against an overall decline in stock prices, and those who
anticipate having money to invest can hedge against an increase in the
over-all level of stock prices. And the list goes on.
Whatever the hedging strategy, the common denominator is that
hedgers willingly give up the opportunity to benefit from favorable
price changes in order to achieve protection against unfavorable price
changes.
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Speculators
Were you to speculate in futures contracts, the person taking the
opposite side of your trade on any given occasion could be a hedger or
it might well be another speculator--someone whose opinion about the
probable direction of prices differs from your own.
The arithmetic of speculation in futures contracts--including the
opportunities it offers and the risks it involves--will be discussed
in detail later on. For now, suffice it to say that speculators are
individuals and firms who seek to profit from anticipated increases or
decreases in futures prices. In so doing, they help provide the risk
capital needed to facilitate hedging.
Someone who expects a futures price to increase would purchase
futures contracts in the hope of later being able to sell them at a
higher price. This is known as "going long." Conversely,
someone who expects a futures price to decline would sell futures
contracts in the hope of later being able to buy back identical and
offsetting contracts at a lower price. The practice of selling futures
contracts in anticipation of lower prices is known as "going
short." One of the attractive features of futures trading is that
it is equally easy to profit from declining prices (by selling) as it
is to profit from rising prices (by buying).
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Floor Traders
Persons known as floor traders or locals, who buy and sell for
their own accounts on the trading floors of the exchanges, are the
least known and understood of all futures market participants. Yet
their role is an important one. Like specialists and market makers at
securities exchanges, they help to provide market liquidity. If there
isn't a hedger or another speculator who is immediately willing to
take the other side of your order at or near the going price, the
chances are there will be an independent floor trader who will do so,
in the hope of minutes or even seconds later being able to make an
offsetting trade at a small profit. In the grain markets, for example,
there is frequently only one-fourth of a cent a bushel difference
between the prices at which a floor trader buys and sells.
Floor traders, of course, have no guarantee they will realize a
profit. They may end up losing money on any given trade. Their
presence, however, makes for more liquid and competitive markets. It
should be pointed out, however, that unlike market makers or
specialists, floor traders are not obligated to maintain a liquid
market or to take the opposite side of customer orders.
| |
Reasons for Buying futures contracts |
Reasons for Selling futures contracts |
| Hedgers |
To lock in a price and thereby obtain protection against
rising prices |
To lock in a price and thereby obtain protection against
declining prices |
| Speculators and floor Traders |
To profit from rising prices |
To profit from declining prices |
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What is a Futures Contract?
There are two types of futures contracts, those that provide for
physical delivery of a particular commodity or item and those which
call for a cash settlement. The month during which delivery or
settlement is to occur is specified. Thus, a July futures contract is
one providing for delivery or settlement in July.
It should be noted that even in the case of delivery-type futures
contracts, very few actually result in delivery.* Not many speculators
have the desire to take or make delivery of, say, 5,000 bushels of
wheat, or 112,000 pounds of sugar, or a million dollars worth of U.S.
Treasury bills for that matter. Rather, the vast majority of
speculators in futures markets choose to realize their gains or losses
by buying or selling offsetting futures contracts prior to the
delivery date. Selling a contract that was previously purchased
liquidates a futures position in exactly the same way, for example,
that selling 100 shares of IBM stock liquidates an earlier purchase of
100 shares of IBM stock. Similarly, a futures contract that was
initially sold can be liquidated by an offsetting purchase. In either
case, gain or loss is the difference between the buying price and the
selling price.
Even hedgers generally don't make or take delivery. Most, like the
jewelry manufacturer illustrated earlier, find it more convenient to
liquidate their futures positions and (if they realize a gain) use the
money to offset whatever adverse price change has occurred in the cash
market.
* When delivery does occur it is in the form of a negotiable
instrument (such as a warehouse receipt) that evidences the holder's
ownership of the commodity, at some designated location.
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Why Delivery?
Since delivery on futures contracts is the exception rather than
the rule, why do most contracts even have a delivery provision? There
are two reasons. One is that it offers buyers and sellers the
opportunity to take or make delivery of the physical commodity if they
so choose. More importantly, however, the fact that buyers and sellers
can take or make delivery helps to assure that futures prices will
accurately reflect the cash market value of the commodity at the time
the contract expires--i.e., that futures and cash prices will
eventually converge. It is convergence that makes hedging an effective
way to obtain protection against an adverse change in the cash market
price.*
* Convergence occurs at the expiration of the futures contract
because any difference between the cash and futures prices would
quickly be negated by profit-minded investors who would buy the
commodity in the lowest-price market and sell it in the highest-price
market until the price difference disappeared. This is known as
arbitrage and is a form of trading generally best left to
professionals in the cash and futures markets.
Cash settlement futures contracts are precisely that, contracts
which are settled in cash rather than by delivery at the time the
contract expires. Stock index futures contracts, for example, are
settled in cash on the basis of the index number at the close of the
final day of trading. There is no provision for delivery of the shares
of stock that make up the various indexes. That would be impractical.
With a cash settlement contract, convergence is automatic.
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The Process of Price
Discovery
Futures prices increase and decrease largely because of the myriad
factors that influence buyers' and sellers' judgments about what a
particular commodity will be worth at a given time in the future
(anywhere from less than a month to more than two years).
As new supply and demand developments occur and as new and more
current information becomes available, these judgments are reassessed
and the price of a particular futures contract may be bid upward or
downward. The process of reassessment--of price discovery--is
continuous.
Thus, in January, the price of a July futures contract would
reflect the consensus of buyers' and sellers' opinions at that time as
to what the value of a commodity or item will be when the contract
expires in July. On any given day, with the arrival of new or more
accurate information, the price of the July futures contract might
increase or decrease in response to changing expectations.
Competitive price discovery is a major economic function--and,
indeed, a major economic benefit--of futures trading. The trading
floor of a futures exchange is where available information about the
future value of a commodity or item is translated into the language of
price. In summary, futures prices are an ever changing barometer of
supply and demand and, in a dynamic market, the only certainty is that
prices will change.
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After the Closing Bell
Once a closing bell signals the end of a day's trading, the
exchange's clearing organization matches each purchase made that day
with its corresponding sale and tallies each member firm's gains or
losses based on that day's price changes--a massive undertaking
considering that nearly two-thirds of a million futures contracts are
bought and sold on an average day. Each firm, in turn, calculates the
gains and losses for each of its customers having futures contracts.
Gains and losses on futures contracts are not only calculated on a
daily basis, they are credited and deducted on a daily basis. Thus, if
a speculator were to have, say, a $300 profit as a result of the day's
price changes, that amount would be immediately credited to his
brokerage account and, unless required for other purposes, could be
withdrawn. On the other hand, if the day's price changes had resulted
in a $300 loss, his account would be immediately debited for that
amount.
The process just described is known as a daily cash settlement and
is an important feature of futures trading. As will be seen when we
discuss margin requirements, it is also the reason a customer who
incurs a loss on a futures position may be called on to deposit
additional funds to his account.
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The Arithmetic of Futures
Trading
To say that gains and losses in futures trading are the result of
price changes is an accurate explanation but by no means a complete
explanation. Perhaps more so than in any other form of speculation or
investment, gains and losses in futures trading are highly leveraged.
An understanding of leverage--and of how it can work to your advantage
or disadvantage--is crucial to an understanding of futures trading.
As mentioned in the introduction, the leverage of futures trading
stems from the fact that only a relatively small amount of money
(known as initial margin) is required to buy or sell a futures
contract. On a particular day, a margin deposit of only $1,000 might
enable you to buy or sell a futures contract covering $25,000 worth of
soybeans. Or for $10,000, you might be able to purchase a futures
contract covering common stocks worth $260,000. The smaller the margin
in relation to the value of the futures contract, the greater the
leverage.
If you speculate in futures contracts and the price moves in the
direction you anticipated, high leverage can produce large profits in
relation to your initial margin. Conversely, if prices move in the
opposite direction, high leverage can produce large losses in relation
to your initial margin. Leverage is a two-edged sword.
For example, assume that in anticipation of rising stock prices you
buy one June S&P 500 stock index futures contract at a time when
the June index is trading at 1000. And assume your initial margin
requirement is $10,000. Since the value of the futures contract is
$250 times the index, each 1 point change in the index represents a
$250 gain or loss.
Thus, an increase in the index from 1000 to 1040 would double your
$10,000 margin deposit and a decrease from 1000 to 960 would wipe it
out. That's a 100% gain or loss as the result of only a 4% change in
the stock index!
Said another way, while buying (or selling) a futures contract
provides exactly the same dollars and cents profit potential as owning
(or selling short) the actual commodities or items covered by the
contract, low margin requirements sharply increase the percentage
profit or loss potential. For example, it can be one thing to have the
value of your portfolio of common stocks decline from $100,000 to
$96,000 (a 4% loss) but quite another (at least emotionally) to
deposit $10,000 as margin for a futures contract and end up losing
that much or more as the result of only a 4% price decline. Futures
trading thus requires not only the necessary financial resources but
also the necessary financial and emotional temperament.
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Trading
An absolute requisite for anyone considering trading in futures
contracts--whether it's sugar or stock indexes, pork bellies or
petroleum--is to clearly understand the concept of leverage as well as
the amount of gain or loss that will result from any given change in
the futures price of the particular futures contract you would be
trading. If you cannot afford the risk, or even if you are
uncomfortable with the risk, the only sound advice is don't trade.
Futures trading is not for everyone.
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Margins
As is apparent from the preceding discussion, the arithmetic of
leverage is the arithmetic of margins. An understanding of
margins--and of the several different kinds of margin--is essential to
an understanding of futures trading.
If your previous investment experience has mainly involved common
stocks, you know that the term margin--as used in connection with
securities--has to do with the cash down payment and money borrowed
from a broker to purchase stocks. But used in connection with futures
trading, margin has an altogether different meaning and serves an
altogether different purpose.
Rather than providing a down payment, the margin required to buy or
sell a futures contract is solely a deposit of good faith money that
can be drawn on by your brokerage firm to cover losses that you may
incur in the course of futures trading. It is much like money held in
an escrow account. Minimum margin requirements for a particular
futures contract at a particular time are set by the exchange on which
the contract is traded. They are typically about five percent of the
current value of the futures contract. Exchanges continuously monitor
market conditions and risks and, as necessary, raise or reduce their
margin requirements. Individual brokerage firms may require higher
margin amounts from their customers than the exchange-set minimums.
There are two margin-related terms you should know: Initial margin
and maintenance margin.
Initial margin (sometimes called original margin) is the sum of
money that the customer must deposit with the brokerage firm for each
futures contract to be bought or sold. On any day that profits accrue
on your open positions, the profits will be added to the balance in
your margin account. On any day losses accrue, the losses will be
deducted from the balance in your margin account.
If and when the funds remaining available in your margin account
are reduced by losses to below a certain level--known as the
maintenance margin requirement--your broker will require that you
deposit additional funds to bring the account back to the level of the
initial margin. Or, you may also be asked for additional margin if the
exchange or your brokerage firm raises its margin requirements.
Requests for additional margin are known as margin calls.
Assume, for example, that the initial margin needed to buy or sell
a particular futures contract is $2,000 and that the maintenance
margin requirement is $1,500. Should losses on open positions reduce
the funds remaining in your trading account to, say, $1,400 (an amount
less than the maintenance requirement), you will receive a margin call
for the $600 needed to restore your account to $2,000.
Before trading in futures contracts, be sure you understand the
brokerage firm's Margin Agreement and know how and when the firm
expects margin calls to be met. Some firms may require only that you
mail a personal check. Others may insist you wire transfer funds from
your bank or provide same-day or next-day delivery of a certified or
cashier's check. If margin calls are not met in the prescribed time
and form, the firm can protect itself by liquidating your open
positions at the available market price (possibly resulting in an
unsecured loss for which you would be liable).
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Basic Trading Strategies
Even if you should decide to participate in futures trading in a
way that doesn't involve having to make day-to-day trading decisions
(such as a managed account or commodity pool), it is nonetheless
useful to understand the dollars and cents of how futures trading
gains and losses are realized. And, of course, if you intend to trade
your own account, such an understanding is essential.
Dozens of different strategies and variations of strategies are
employed by futures traders in pursuit of speculative profits. Here is
a brief description and illustration of several basic strategies.
Buying (Going Long) to Profit from an Expected Price Increase
Someone expecting the price of a particular commodity or item to
increase over from a given period of time can seek to profit by buying
futures contracts. If correct in forecasting the direction and timing
of the price change, the futures contract can later be sold for the
higher price, thereby yielding a profit.* If the price declines rather
than increases, the trade will result in a loss. Because of leverage,
the gain or loss may be greater than the initial margin deposit.
For example, assume it's now January, the July soybean futures
contract is presently quoted at $6.00, and over the coming months you
expect the price to increase. You decide to deposit the required
initial margin of, say, $1,500 and buy one July soybean futures
contract. Further assume that by April the July soybean futures price
has risen to $6.40 and you decide to take your profit by selling.
Since each contract is for 5,000 bushels, your 40-cent a bushel profit
would be 5,000 bushels x 40 cents or $2,000 less transaction costs.
| |
|
Price per bushel |
Value of 5,000 bushel contract |
| January |
Buy 1 July soybean futures contract |
$6.00 |
$30,000 |
| April |
Sell 1 July soybean futures contract |
$6.40 |
$32,000 |
| |
Gain |
$ .40 |
$ 2,000 |
* For simplicity examples do not take into account commissions
and other transaction costs. These costs are important, however, and
you should be sure you fully understand them. Suppose, however, that
rather than rising to $6.40, the July soybean futures price had
declined to $5.60 and that, in order to avoid the possibility of
further loss, you elect to sell the contract at that price. On 5,000
bushels your 40-cent a bushel loss would thus come to $2,000 plus
transaction costs.
| |
|
Price per bushel |
Value of 5,000 bushel contract |
| January |
Buy 1 July soybean futures contract |
$6.00 |
$30,000 |
| April |
Sell 1 July bean futures contract |
$5.60 |
$28,000 |
| |
Loss |
$ .40 |
$ 2,000 |
Note that the loss in this example exceeded your $1,500 initial
margin. Your broker would then call upon you, as needed, for
additional margin funds to cover the loss. (Going short) to profit
from an expected price decrease The only way going short to profit
from an expected price decrease differs from going long to profit from
an expected price increase is the sequence of the trades. Instead of
first buying a futures contract, you first sell a futures contract.
If, as expected, the price declines, a profit can be realized by later
purchasing an offsetting futures contract at the lower price. The gain
per unit will be the amount by which the purchase price is below the
earlier selling price. For example, assume that in January your
research or other available information indicates a probable decrease
in cattle prices over the next several months. In the hope of
profiting, you deposit an initial margin of $2,000 and sell one April
live cattle futures contract at a price of, say, 65 cents a pound.
Each contract is for 40,000 pounds, meaning each 1 cent a pound change
in price will increase or decrease the value of the futures contract
by $400. If, by March, the price has declined to 60 cents a pound, an
offsetting futures contract can be purchased at 5 cents a pound below
the original selling price. On the 40,000 pound contract, that's a
gain of 5 cents x 40,000 lbs. or $2,000 less transaction costs.
Assume you were wrong. Instead of decreasing, the April live
cattle futures price increases--to, say, 70 cents a pound by the time
in March when you eventually liquidate your short futures position
through an offsetting purchase. The outcome would be as follows:
| |
|
Price per pound |
Value of 40,000 pound contract |
| January |
Sell 1 April live cattle futures contract |
65 cents |
$26,000 |
| March |
Buy 1 April live cattle futures contract |
70 cents |
$28,000 |
| |
Loss |
5 cents |
$ 2,000 |
In this example, the loss of 5 cents a pound on the futures
transaction resulted in a total loss of the $2,000 you deposited as
initial margin plus transaction costs.
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Spreads
While most speculative futures transactions involve a simple
purchase of futures contracts to profit from an expected price
increase--or an equally simple sale to profit from an expected price
decrease--numerous other possible strategies exist. Spreads are one
example. A spread, at least in its simplest form, involves buying one
futures contract and selling another futures contract. The purpose is
to profit from an expected change in the relationship between the
purchase price of one and the selling price of the other. As an
illustration, assume it's now November, that the March wheat futures
price is presently $3.10 a bushel and the May wheat futures price is
presently $3.15 a bushel, a difference of 5 cents. Your analysis of
market conditions indicates that, over the next few months, the price
difference between the two contracts will widen to become greater than
5 cents. To profit if you are right, you could sell the March futures
contract (the lower priced contract) and buy the May futures contract
(the higher priced contract). Assume time and events prove you right
and that, by February, the March futures price has risen to $3.20 and
May futures price is $3.35, a difference of 15 cents. By liquidating
both contracts at this time, you can realize a net gain of 10 cents a
bushel. Since each contract is 5,000 bushels, the total gain is $500.
| November |
Sell March wheat |
Buy May wheat |
Spread |
| |
$3.10 Bu. |
$3.15 Bu. |
5 cents |
| February |
Buy March wheat |
Sell May wheat |
|
| |
$3.20 |
$3.35 |
15 cents |
| |
$ .10 loss |
$ .20 gain |
|
Net gain 10 cents Bu. Gain on 5,000 Bu. contract
$500 Had the spread (i.e. the price difference) narrowed by 10
cents a bushel rather than widened by 10 cents a bushel the
transactions just illustrated would have resulted in a loss of $500.
Virtually unlimited numbers and types of spread possibilities exist,
as do many other, even more complex futures trading strategies. These,
however, are beyond the scope of an introductory booklet and should be
considered only by someone who well understands the risk/reward
arithmetic involved.
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What to Look for in a
Futures Contract?
Whatever type of investment you are considering--including but not
limited to futures contracts--it makes sense to begin by obtaining as
much information as possible about that particular investment. The
more you know in advance, the less likely there will be surprises
later on. Moreover, even among futures contracts, there are important
differences which--because they can affect your investment
results--should be taken into account in making your investment
decisions.
The Contract Unit
Delivery-type futures contracts stipulate the specifications of the
commodity to be delivered (such as 5,000 bushels of grain, 40,000
pounds of livestock, or 100 troy ounces of gold). Foreign currency
futures provide for delivery of a specified number of marks, francs,
yen, pounds or pesos. U.S. Treasury obligation futures are in terms of
instruments having a stated face value (such as $100,000 or $1
million) at maturity. Futures contracts that call for cash settlement
rather than delivery are based on a given index number times a
specified dollar multiple. This is the case, for example, with stock
index futures. Whatever the yardstick, it's important to know
precisely what it is you would be buying or selling, and the quantity
you would be buying or selling.
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How Prices are Quoted
Futures prices are usually quoted the same way prices are quoted in
the cash market (where a cash market exists). That is, in dollars,
cents, and sometimes fractions of a cent, per bushel, pound or ounce;
also in dollars, cents and increments of a cent for foreign
currencies; and in points and percentages of a point for financial
instruments. Cash settlement contract prices are quoted in terms of an
index number, usually stated to two decimal points. Be certain you
understand the price quotation system for the particular futures
contract you are considering.
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Minimum Price Changes
Exchanges establish the minimum amount that the price can fluctuate
upward or downward. This is known as the "tick" For example,
each tick for grain is 0.25 cents per bushel. On a 5,000 bushel
futures contract, that's $12.50. On a gold futures contract, the tick
is 10 cents per ounce, which on a 100 ounce contract is $10. You'll
want to familiarize yourself with the minimum price fluctuation--the
tick size--for whatever futures contracts you plan to trade. And, of
course, you'll need to know how a price change of any given amount
will affect the value of the contract.
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Daily Price Limits
Exchanges establish daily price limits for trading in futures
contracts. The limits are stated in terms of the previous day's
closing price plus and minus so many cents or dollars per trading
unit. Once a futures price has increased by its daily limit, there can
be no trading at any higher price until the next day of trading.
Conversely, once a futures price has declined by its daily limit,
there can be no trading at any lower price until the next day of
trading. Thus, if the daily limit for a particular grain is currently
10 cents a bushel and the previous day's settlement price was $3.00,
there can not be trading during the current day at any price below
$2.90 or above $3.10. The price is allowed to increase or decrease by
the limit amount each day. For some contracts, daily price limits are
eliminated during the month in which the contract expires. Because
prices can become particularly volatile during the expiration month
(also called the "delivery" or "spot" month),
persons lacking experience in futures trading may wish to liquidate
their positions prior to that time. Or, at the very least, trade
cautiously and with an understanding of the risks which may be
involved. Daily price limits set by the exchanges are subject to
change. They can, for example, be increased once the market price has
increased or decreased by the existing limit for a given number of
successive days. Because of daily price limits, there may be occasions
when it is not possible to liquidate an existing futures position at
will. In this event, possible alternative strategies should be
discussed with a broker
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Position Limits
Although the average trader is unlikely to ever approach them,
exchanges and the CFTC establish limits on the maximum speculative
position that any one person can have at one time in any one futures
contract. The purpose is to prevent one buyer or seller from being
able to exert undue influence on the price in either the establishment
or liquidation of positions. Position limits are stated in number of
contracts or total units of the commodity. The easiest way to obtain
the types of information just discussed is to ask your broker or other
advisor to provide you with a copy of the contract specifications for
the specific futures contracts you are thinking about trading. Or you
can obtain the information from the exchange where the contract is
traded.
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Understanding (and
Managing) the Risks of Futures Trading
Anyone buying or selling futures contracts should clearly
understand that the Risks of any given transaction may result in a
Futures Trading loss. The loss may exceed not only the amount of the
initial margin but also the entire amount deposited in the account or
more. Moreover, while there are a number of steps which can be taken
in an effort to limit the size of possible losses, there can be no
guarantees that these steps will prove effective. Well-informed
futures traders should, nonetheless, be familiar with available risk
management possibilities.
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Choosing a Futures Contract
Just as different common stocks or different bonds may involve
different degrees of probable risk. and reward at a particular time,
so may different futures contracts. The market for one commodity may,
at present, be highly volatile, perhaps because of supply-demand
uncertainties which--depending on future developments--could suddenly
propel prices sharply higher or sharply lower. The market for some
other commodity may currently be less volatile, with greater
likelihood that prices will fluctuate in a narrower range. You should
be able to evaluate and choose the futures contracts that
appear--based on present information--most likely to meet your
objectives and willingness to accept risk. Keep in mind, however, that
neither past nor even present price behavior provides assurance of
what will occur in the future. Prices that have been relatively stable
may become highly volatile (which is why many individuals and firms
choose to hedge against unforeseeable price changes).
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Liquidity
There can be no ironclad assurance that, at all times, a liquid
market will exist for offsetting a futures contract that you have
previously bought or sold. This could be the case if, for example, a
futures price has increased or decreased by the maximum allowable
daily limit and there is no one presently willing to buy the futures
contract you want to sell or sell the futures contract you want to
buy. Even on a day-to-day basis, some contracts and some delivery
months tend to be more actively traded and liquid than others. Two
useful indicators of liquidity are the volume of trading and the open
interest (the number of open futures positions still remaining to be
liquidated by an offsetting trade or satisfied by delivery). These
figures are usually reported in newspapers that carry futures
quotations. The information is also available from your broker or
advisor and from the exchange where the contract is traded.
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Timing
In futures trading, being right about the direction of prices isn't
enough. It is also necessary to anticipate the timing of price
changes. The reason, of course, is that an adverse price change may,
in the short run, result in a greater loss than you are willing to
accept in the hope of eventually being proven right in the long run.
Example: In January, you deposit initial margin of $1,500 to buy a May
wheat futures contract at $3.30--anticipating that, by spring, the
price will climb to $3.50 or higher No sooner than you buy the
contract, the price drops to $3.15, a loss of $750. To avoid the risk
of a further loss, you have your broker liquidate the position. The
possibility that the price may now recover--and even climb to $3.50 or
above--is of no consolation. The lesson to be learned is that deciding
when to buy or sell a futures contract can be as important as deciding
what futures contract to buy or sell. In fact, it can be argued that
timing is the key to successful futures trading.
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Stop Orders
A stop order is an order, placed with your broker, to buy or sell a
particular futures contract at the market price if and when the price
reaches a specified level. Stop orders are often used by futures
traders in an effort to limit the amount they. might lose if the
futures price moves against their position. For example, were you to
purchase a crude oil futures contract at $21.00 a barrel and wished to
limit your loss to $1.00 a barrel, you might place a stop order to
sell an off-setting contract if the price should fall to, say, $20.00
a barrel. If and when the market reaches whatever price you specify, a
stop order becomes an order to execute the desired trade at the best
price immediately obtainable. There can be no guarantee, however, that
it will be possible under all market conditions to execute the order
at the price specified. In an active, volatile market, the market
price may be declining (or rising) so rapidly that there is no
opportunity to liquidate your position at the stop price you have
designated. Under these circumstances, the broker's only obligation is
to execute your order at the best price that is available. In the
event that prices have risen or fallen by the maximum daily limit, and
there is presently no trading in the contract (known as a "lock
limit" market), it may not be possible to execute your order at
any price. In addition, although it happens infrequently, it is
possible that markets may be lock limit for more than one day,
resulting in substantial losses to futures traders who may find it
impossible to liquidate losing futures positions. Subject to the kinds
of limitations just discussed, stop orders can nonetheless provide a
useful tool for the futures trader who seeks to limit his losses. Far
more often than not, it will be possible. for the broker to execute a
stop order at or near the specified price. In addition to providing a
way to limit losses, stop orders can also be employed to protect
profits. For instance, if you have bought crude oil futures at $21.00
a barrel and the price is now at $24.00 a barrel, you might wish to
place a stop order to sell if and when the price declines to $23.00.
This (again subject to the described limitations of stop orders) could
protect $2.00 of your existing $3.00 profit while still allowing you
to benefit from any continued increase in price.
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Spreads
Spreads involve the purchase of one futures contract and the sale
of a different futures contract in the hope of profiting from a
widening or narrowing of the price difference. Because gains and
losses occur only as the result of a change in the price
difference--rather than as a result of a change in the overall level
of futures prices--spreads are often considered more conservative and
less risky than having an outright long or short futures position. In
general, this may be the case. It should be recognized, though, that
the loss from a spread can be as great as--or even greater than--that
which might be incurred in having an outright futures position. An
adverse widening or narrowing of the spread during a particular time
period may exceed the change in the overall level of futures prices,
and it is possible to experience losses on both of the futures
contracts involved (that is, on both legs of the spread).
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Options on Futures
Contracts
What are known as put and call options are being traded on a
growing number of futures contracts. The principal attraction of
buying options is that they make it possible to speculate on
increasing or decreasing futures prices with a known and limited risk.
The most that the buyer of an option can lose is the cost of
purchasing the option (known as the option "premium") plus
transaction costs. Options can be most easily understood when call
options and put options are considered separately, since, in fact,
they are totally separate and distinct. Buying or selling a call in no
way involves a put, and buying or selling a put in no way involves a
call.
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Buying Call Options
The buyer of a call option acquires the right but not the
obligation to purchase (go long) a particular futures contract at a
specified price at any time during the life of the option. Each option
specifies the futures contract which may be purchased (known as the
"underlying" futures contract) and the price at which it can
be purchased (known as the "exercise" or "strike"
price). A March Treasury bond 84 call option would convey the right to
buy one March U.S. Treasury bond futures contract at a price of
$84,000 at any time during the life of the option. One reason for
buying call options is to profit from an anticipated increase in the
underlying futures price. A call option buyer will realize a net
profit if, upon exercise, the underlying futures price is above the
option exercise price by more than the premium paid for the option. Or
a profit can be realized it, prior to expiration, the option rights
can be sold for more than they cost. Example: You expect lower
interest rates to result in higher bond prices (interest rates and
bond prices move inversely). To profit if you are right, you buy a
June T-bond 82 call. Assume the premium you pay is $2,000. If, at the
expiration of the option (in May) the June T-bond futures price is 88,
you can realize a gain of 6 (that's $6,000) by exercising or selling
the option that was purchased at 82. Since you paid $2,000 for the
option, your net profit is $4,000 less transaction costs. As
mentioned, the most that an option buyer can lose is the option
premium plus transaction costs. Thus, in the preceding example, the
most you could have lost--no matter how wrong you might have been
about the direction and timing of interest rates and bond
prices--would have been the $2,000 premium you paid for the option
plus transaction costs. In contrast if you had an outright long
position in the underlying futures contract, your potential loss would
be unlimited. It should be pointed out, however, that while an option
buyer has a limited risk (the loss of the option premium), his profit
potential is reduced by the amount of the premium. In the example, the
option buyer realized a net profit of $4,000. For someone with an
outright long position in the June T-bond futures contract, an
increase in the futures price from 82 to 88 would have yielded a net
profit of $6,000 less transaction costs. Although an option buyer
cannot lose more than the premium paid for the option, he can lose the
entire amount of the premium. This will be the case if an option held
until expiration is not worthwhile to exercise.
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Buying Put Options
Whereas a call option conveys the right to purchase (go long) a
particular futures contract at a specified price, a put option conveys
the right to sell (go short) a particular futures contract at a
specified price. Put options can be purchased to profit from an
anticipated price decrease. As in the case of call options, the most
that a put option buyer can lose, if he is wrong about the direction
or timing of the price change, is the option premium plus transaction
costs. Example: Expecting a decline in the price of gold, you pay a
premium of $1,000 to purchase an October 320 gold put option. The
option gives you the right to sell a 100 ounce gold futures contract
for $320 an ounce. Assume that, at expiration, the October futures
price has--as you expected-declined to $290 an ounce. The option
giving you the right to sell at $320 can thus be sold or exercised at
a gain of $30 an ounce. On 100 ounces, that's $3,000. After
subtracting $1,000 paid for the option, your net profit comes to
$2,000. Had you been wrong about the direction or timing of a change
in the gold futures price, the most you could have lost would have
been the $1,000 premium paid for the option plus transaction costs.
However, you could have lost the entire premium.
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How Option Premiums are
Determined
Option premiums are determined the same way futures prices are
determined, through active competition between buyers and sellers.
Three major variables influence the premium for a given option: * The
option's exercise price, or, more specifically, the relationship
between the exercise price and the current price of the underlying
futures contract. All else being equal, an option that is already
worthwhile to exercise (known as an "in-the-money" option)
commands a higher premium than an option that is not yet worthwhile to
exercise (an "out-of-the-money" option). For example, if a
gold contract is currently selling at $295 an ounce, a put option
conveying the right to sell gold at $320 an ounce is more valuable
than a put option that conveys the right to sell gold at only $300 an
ounce. * The length of time remaining until expiration. All else being
equal, an option with a long period of time remaining until expiration
commands a higher premium than an option with a short period of time
remaining until expiration because it has more time in which to become
profitable. Said another way, an option is an eroding asset. Its time
value declines as it approaches expiration. * The volatility of the
underlying futures contract. All rise being equal, the greater the
volatility the higher the option premium. In a volatile market, the
option stands a greater chance of becoming profitable to exercise.
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Selling Options
At this point, you might well ask, who sells the options that
option buyers purchase? The answer is that options are sold by other
market participants known as option writers, or grantors. Their sole
reason for writing options is to earn the premium paid by the option
buyer. If the option expires without being exercised (which is what
the option writer hopes will happen), the writer retains the full
amount of the premium. If the option buyer exercises the option,
however, the writer must pay the difference between the market value
and the exercise price. It should be emphasized and clearly recognized
that unlike an option buyer who has a limited risk (the loss of the
option premium), the writer of an option has unlimited risk. This is
because any gain realized by the option buyer if and when he exercises
the option will become a loss for the option writer.
| |
Reward |
Risk |
| Option Buyer |
Except for the premium, an option buyer has the same
profit potential as someone with an outright position in the
underlying futures contract. |
An option maximum loss: is the premium paid for the option |
| Option Writer |
An option writer's maximum profit is premium received for
writing the option |
An option writer's loss is unlimited. Except for the
premium received, risk is the same as having an outright
position in the underlying futures contract. |
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In Closing
The foregoing is, at most, a brief and incomplete discussion of a
complex topic. Options trading has its own vocabulary and its own
arithmetic. If you wish to consider trading in options on futures
contracts, you should discuss the possibility with your broker and
read and thoroughly understand the Options Disclosure Document which
he is required to provide. In addition, have your broker provide you
with educational and other literature prepared by the exchanges on
which options are traded. Or contact the exchange directly. A number
of excellent publications are available. In no way, it should be
emphasized, should anything discussed herein be considered trading
advice or recommendations. That should be provided by your broker or
advisor. Similarly, your broker or advisor--as well as the exchanges
where futures contracts are traded--are your best sources for
additional, more detailed information about futures trading.
Source: National Futures Association
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