| Futures
Trading - The Perfect Business?
Futures trading is a business that gives you
everything you've ever wanted from a business of your
own. Roberts (1991) calls it the world's perfect
business. It offers the potential for unlimited earnings
and real wealth, and you can run it working your own
hours while continuing to do whatever you're doing
now.
You operate this business entirely on your
own, and can start with very little capital. You won't
have any employees, so you wouldn't need attorneys,
accountants, or bookkeepers. In fact, although you'd be
buying and selling the very necessities of life, you
never even carry an inventory.
What's more, you'd
never have collection problems because you won't have
any "customers," and since there is no competition, you
won't have to pay the high cost of advertising. You also
won't need office space, warehousing, or a distribution
system. All you need is a personal computer and you can
conduct business from anywhere in the world....
Interested?... Please go ahead and read on!
What is a Futures Contract?
A futures contract is a standardized, transferable,
exchange-traded contract that requires delivery of a
commodity, bond, currency, or stock index, at a
specified price, on a specified future date. Generally,
the delivery does not occur; instead, before the
contract expires, the holder usually "squares their
position" by paying or receiving the difference between
the current market price of the underlying asset and the
price stipulated in the contract.
Unlike options,
futures contracts convey an obligation to buy. The risk
to the holder is unlimited. Because the payoff pattern
is symmetrical, the risk to the seller is unlimited as
well. Dollars lost and gained by each party on a futures
contract are equal and opposite. In other words, futures
trading is a zero-sum proposition.
Futures
contracts are forward contracts, meaning they represent
a pledge to make a certain transaction at a future date.
The exchange of assets occurs on the date specified in
the contract. Futures are distinguished from generic
forward contracts in that they contain standardized
terms, trade on a formal exchange, are regulated by
overseeing agencies, and are guaranteed by
clearinghouses. Also, in order to insure that payment
will occur, futures have a margin requirement that must
be settled daily. Finally, by making an offsetting
trade, taking delivery of goods, or arranging for an
exchange of goods, futures contracts can be
closed.
Trading in futures is regulated by the
Securities & Exchange Board of India (SEBI). SEBI
exists to guard against traders controlling the market
in an illegal or unethical manner, and to prevent fraud
in the futures market.
Futures
Trading
Futures contracts are purchased when
the investor expects the price of the underlying
security to rise. This is known as going long. Because
he has purchased the obligation to buy goods at the
current price, the holder will profit if the price goes
up, allowing him to sell his futures contract for a
profit or take delivery of the goods on the future date
at the lower price.
The opposite of going long is
going short. In this case, the holder acquires the
obligation to sell the underlying commodity at the
current price. He will profit if the price declines
before the future date.
Hedgers trade futures for
the purpose of keeping price risk in check. Because the
price for a future transaction can be set in the
present, the fluctuations in the interim can be avoided.
If the price goes up, the holder will be buying at a
discount. If the price goes down, he will miss out on
the new lower price. Hedging with futures can even be
used to protect against unfavorable interest rate
adjustments.
While hedgers attempt to avoid risk,
speculators seek it out in the hope of turning a profit
when prices fluctuate. Speculators trade purely for the
purpose of making a profit and never intend to take
delivery on goods. Like options, futures contracts can
also be used to create spreads that profit from price
fluctuations.
Accounts used to trade futures must
be settled with respect to the margin on a daily basis.
Gains and losses are tallied on the day that they occur.
Margin accounts that fall below a certain level must be
credited with additional funds.
Settling
Futures Contracts
Futures contracts are
usually not settled with physical delivery. The purchase
or sale of an offsetting position can be used to settle
an existing position, allowing the speculator or hedger
to realize profits or losses from the original contract.
At this point the margin balance is returned to the
holder along with any additional gains, or the margin
balance plus profit as a credit toward the holder's
loss. Cash settlement is used for contracts like stock
index futures that obviously cannot result in
delivery.
The purpose of the delivery option is
to insure that the futures price and the cash price of
good converge at the expiration date. If this were not
true, the good would be available at two different
prices at the same time. Traders could then make a
risk-free profit by purchasing goods in the market with
the lower price and selling in the market with the
higher price. That strategy is called arbitrage. It
allows some traders to profit from very small
differences in price at the time of
expiration.
Pricing Futures
Futures
prices are presented in the same format as cash market
prices. When these prices change, they must change by at
least a certain minimum amount, called the tick. The
tick is set by the exchange.
Prices are also
subject to a maximum daily change. These limits are also
determined by the exchange. Once a limit is reached, no
trading is allowed on the other side of that limit for
the duration of the session. Both lower and upper limits
are in effect. Limits were instituted to guard against
particularly drastic fluctuations in the
market.
In addition to these limits, there is
also a maximum number of contracts for a given commodity
per person. This limit serves to prevent one investor
from gaining such great influence over the price that he
can begin to control it.
How Futures came into being - The
History of the Markets
Along time ago, back in the days of
Caesar, farmers and herdsmen needed a place to go to
trade their commodities. Commodities, according to
Webster’s Dictionary, is any useful thing that is bought
and sold as an article of commerce. So, the farmers set
up a marketplace in which to trade the "commodities".
That was all well and good except for the problem of
timing. Unfortunately, corn and other grains only are
harvested at certain times of the year while the need
for these grains was consistent year-round.
The traders began making what is now
called a forward contract. A forward contract in
the commodities market is a contract made by two people
setup for the purchase and sale of a certain amount of a
certain commodity for delivery at a certain time. It is
considered a forward contract because delivery of the
good occurs in the future. These forward contracts
allowed farmers and herdsmen to guarantee a buyer for
their grains and herds at a certain price and in the
time frame that they needed. This went well for a while;
but, as time went on, they incurred some problems.
For example, let’s say Antonious was a
farmer of wheat back in the Caesarian times. And, he
agreed to sell 5,000 bushels of wheat to Platius.
Delivery was set for September. All is going great until
a flash flood wiped out Antonius’ entire crop. September
comes around and Platius approaches Antonius to collect
his new wheat. Well, the price of wheat now has doubled
and Antonius doesn’t have any wheat. Oh, did I also tell
you that Antonius skipped town. This poses a huge
problem for Platius since he must now find someone else
who has wheat, but also, he must pay double for it.
Fortunately, this welching problem was corrected by the
formation of "Guilds". The guilds were formed by the
very traders using the markets. The guilds hold the
entire group of users personally responsible. This
allowed for confidence and insurance that the contracts
made in the market would be backed by the full faith of
the markets.
Upon the fall of the Roman Empire, the
commodity markets followed in the same way. The "Dark
Ages" brought a type of market, which had no centralized
meeting place. A sort of nomadic group would travel
around from village to village and buy or sell their
supplies to those who needed them. Many times, traders
would trick others upon the purchase of a pig. The buyer
would choose the pig he or she wanted and the seller
would reach under the table to grab a bag. Well, at the
same time they were grabbing a bag, they would drop the
pig and place a cat into the bag. What a surprise it
must have been for the buyer to get home only to find
out they would be the proud owner a cheap, useless cat
instead of a pig. That is where the term, "Let the cat
out-of-the-bag" comes from. After the dark ages, there
wasn’t a great deal of information recorded on the
markets until the mid-1800’s.
The first futures contract (which is
much like that of a forward contract) in our modern
markets as we know of them today was for 2,000 bushels
of corn traded in 1852. It was traded in a mid-sized
town back then on the coast of Lake Michigan. Yes, that
mid-sized town was Chicago, Illinois. A few years later,
the Chicago Board of Trade was founded. Things haven’t
changed much since then. Except for the chalk boards
where the prices were written upon are now digital and
the telegraph has been upgraded to the telephone,
everything else is pretty much the same. Today, there
are many boards of trade, Chicago, Kansas City,
Minneapolis, Montreal, QB; New York City, London, Hong
Kong and many other cities around the world.
You may wonder why do we need the
markets other than to have a place for producers and
consumers of these commodities to trade. Well, the
producers and consumers set up these markets to relieve
themselves of the risk of losing excessive amounts of
money from price fluctuation. You may ask where does the
risk go? Well, the answer is the speculator. A
speculator is an individual or a group of individuals
that trade in the markets purely for the opportunity to
make money. They are the traders that carry the risk in
order to attempt to profit off it.
Futures Trading - The Perfect Business?
Futures trading is a business that gives you
everything you've ever wanted from a business of your
own. Roberts (1991) calls it the world's perfect
business. It offers the potential for unlimited earnings
and real wealth, and you can run it working your own
hours while continuing to do whatever you're doing
now.
You operate this business entirely on your
own, and can start with very little capital. You won't
have any employees, so you wouldn't need attorneys,
accountants, or bookkeepers. In fact, although you'd be
buying and selling the very necessities of life, you
never even carry an inventory.
What's more, you'd
never have collection problems because you won't have
any "customers," and since there is no competition, you
won't have to pay the high cost of advertising. You also
won't need office space, warehousing, or a distribution
system. All you need is a personal computer and you can
conduct business from anywhere in the world.
Your
business deals with the basic staples of everyday life:
lumber, fuel, grains, meats, orange juice, sugar, cocoa,
coffee, metals, currencies, and so on. Individuals,
small businesses, and giant corporations use these items
every day of the year, so there always is, and always
will be, a need for them.
The commodities
business doesn't suffer from hard times because it can
flourish under any economic conditions. In fact,
commodity exchanges have been thriving for centuries.
Their purpose is to provide a means for the orderly
transfer of commodities between buyers and
sellers.
Farmers, dealers, and manufacturers use
the world-wide network of commodity exchanges to reduce
the risks of future price fluctuations. That's why only
part of the exchange floor is devoted to cash sales of
commodities for immediate delivery, and over 90% of an
exchange's business is in futures
contracts.
How do you fit in!
In your futures business, you buy or sell futures
contracts because you expect to make a profit on the
transaction.
In fact, most futures & commodities traders have no use for the actual
commodities they are trading; they never even see them.
They are just people like you and me; people with a
certain amount of capital to invest getting started in
their own business.
There are millions of them
and they come from almost every profession: from clerks
to executives, from janitors to doctors, from students
to university presidents. It is the millions of traders
controlling the millions and millions of contracts that
allow the exchanges to exist.
But more than that,
we make it possible for farmers, dealers, and
manufacturers to reduce their own risks. For performing
this service, we expect to make a profit.
The
great thing about all of this is that you don't need a
college degree or even a high school education to do
well trading futures. However, you do need some
training, you need an objective system, and you need a
plan. |