Futures Trading Guide: August 2014 Editor Matthew Carstens
Futures Trading Guide: August 2014 Editor Matthew Carstens
Futures Trading Guide: August 2014 Editor Matthew Carstens
August 2014
The aim of this guide is to provide you with the prerequisite information that
you will need before venturing into futures trading. This guide is not intended to
encourage nor discourage you about futures trading. Any investment decision
you make should only be done after you have consulted your broker or financial
advisor with respect to your financial circumstances.
Arb............................................................................................................................13
Arbitrage...................................................................................................................13
Contract....................................................................................................................13
Contract size.............................................................................................................13
Clearing.....................................................................................................................13
Clearing House..........................................................................................................14
Derivative..................................................................................................................14
Hedging....................................................................................................................14
Limit (Up or Down).....................................................................................................14
Margin Call................................................................................................................14
Market Marker...........................................................................................................14
Mark-to-Market.........................................................................................................14
Pit.............................................................................................................................15
Spot Price.................................................................................................................15
Tick...........................................................................................................................15
4. The Marketplace
Participants...............................................................................................................16
Pit & Electronic Trading...............................................................................................17
Exchanges................................................................................................................17
Regulatory Bodies.....................................................................................................18
5. Trading Futures
6. 5 Trading Tips
7. Choosing a Broker
Commissions.............................................................................................................24
Other fees..................................................................................................................24
Broker reputation........................................................................................................25
Customer support......................................................................................................25
Intangibles.................................................................................................................25
8. Trading Risks
Overtrading...............................................................................................................26
Market Risk...............................................................................................................26
Liquidity Risk.............................................................................................................26
Excessive Leverage...................................................................................................26
Technology Risk / Internet Trading Risks.......................................................................26
What remained after what some consider to be the first speculative bubble
was the foundation for modern day futures exchanges with attributes
including centralized trading, standardized contracts and regulation.
Then in the mid 1800s as Chicago found itself at the center of railroad
and telegraph lines and about the same time higher wheat production
substantially increased due to the invention of the McCormick reaper,
wheat sellers found themselves at the mercy of dealers after traveling with
no storage facilities to speak of.
Despite the changes that have occurred over time, the main purpose of the futures
market is still to provide an effective and efficient system for the management of price
risk. The purchase and selling of futures contracts provide a predetermined price for a
future purchase or sale thus allowing businesses and individuals to protect themselves
against adverse price changes.
Chicago has the largest futures exchange in the world, the CME (Chicago Mercantile
Exchange), which operates with both the open outcry (traders standing in a pit calling
out orders for execution) and electronic trading (through their Globex platform) methods.
As a sign of the times, now at least 70% of the CMEs futures contracts are executed
over Globex with over 1 million contracts traded or upwards of $50 billion in value.
Futures Symbology
When looking for a trade, youll need to look up the asset by its symbol. Futures symbols
consist of 3 items.
Product Symbol
Delivery Month
Year
Product Symbol
Since there are hundreds of products to choose from well give an example of Natural
Gas here which would be, NG
Delivery Month
Year
This is self-explanatory, so lets use the year 2014 as an example. In this case you would
just denote the last 2 digits 14.
NOTE: the symbol for a Natural Gas December 2014 contract would then be:
Agriculture
Source: www.investing.com/commodities/softs
Source: www.investing.com/commodities/grains
Source: www.investing.com/commodities/meats
Energy
Crude Oil
Ethanol
Natural Gas
Refined Products
Coal
Emissions
Source: www.investing.com/commodities/energies
Equity Index
US Indexes
International Indexes
Sector Indexes
Source: www.investing.com/indices/indices-futures
FX or Currencies
G10 Pairs
Emerging Markets
FX Volatility
E-micros
Source: www.investing.com/quotes/fx-futures
Interest Rates
Source: www.investing.com/indices/indices-futures
Arb
Hand gestures used to communicate orders in the pit.
Futures Symbology
When looking for a trade, youll need to look up the asset by its symbol. Futures symbols
consist of 3 items.
Product Symbol
Delivery Month
Year
Arbitrage
Simultaneous buying and selling of an asset to profit from a discrepancy in prices. This
may also include some aspects of hedging.
Contract
A standardized agreement between two parties detailing the quality, and quantity of an
underlying asset on a date in the future.
Contract size
Set by the exchange, this is the amount of a commodity controlled for 1 contract. For
instance 1 contract of gold represents 100 ounces of gold.
Clearing
The procedure through which the clearing house or association becomes the buyer to
each seller of a futures contract, and the seller to each buyer, and assumes responsibility
for protecting buyers and sellers from financial loss by assuring performance on each
contract.
Clearing House
Usually a division of an exchange where transactions executed on the floor are settled.
They also ensure delivery (if needed), and financing is taken care of between parties.
Derivative
A financial instrument where the price is directly dependent upon (i.e., derived from)
the value of another financial instrument(s). When trading derivatives, there is no transfer
of property.
Hedging
Taking offsetting positions usually in two different markets to minimize the risk of financial
loss.
Margin Call
Usually due to adverse price movements against a trader, this is a request from a broker/
clearing firm to add more funds to cover their current position before their position is
subject to liquidation.
Market Marker
A dealer who has an obligation to buy when there is an excess of sell orders and to sell
when there is an excess of buy orders.
Mark-to-Market
A daily cash flow system used for a futures contract to maintain a minimum level of
margin equity that is calculated at the end of each trading day.
Pit
Also called a ring, this is an arena on the trading floor of some exchanges where
trading is conducted.
Spot Price
The price at which a physical commodity for immediate delivery is selling at a given time
and place.
Tick
The minimum change in price up or down.
The Marketplace
Participants
FCM (Futures Commission Merchant)
A broker or brokerage firm that executes orders on behalf of traders (clients) as well as
extends credit to them for margined transactions. They also hold client funds as well.
Hedgers
Hedgers are those who use the futures market to reduce the risk associated with price
fluctuation for a commodity which is going to be bought or sold at a future date. By
fixing the price for a commodity or product to be bought or sold in the future, hedgers
can avoid the risk of future price fluctuation especially when they are unsure how the
market will react.
Speculators
Persons engaged in speculating on price movements. Speculators do not participate in
the delivery process thus gain or lose money by offsetting futures and option instruments
before contract expiry. Speculators buy and sell in the Futures markets hoping to profit
from the very price changes which hedgers try to insure themselves against.
Floor Traders
An exchange member who executes trades on the exchange floor typically for his or her
own account. Also known as locals.
Floor Brokers
An employee of a member firm who executes trades on the exchange floor on behalf of
the firms clients.
Electronic Trading
Electronic Trading, referring to trading done through computerized trading markets,
continues to replace pit trading due to its expanded trading sessions, lower costs and
efficiency. Although more and more futures trades are conducted online, the trading
pits of the US Futures Exchanges are still a hive of activity.
NOTE: There are new products being created specifically for electronic trading
like the E-mini S&P 500 contract and the E-mini Nasdaq 100 contract.
Exchanges
There is a long list of futures exchanges listed globally, however here are many of the
major ones of note.
Regulatory Bodies
Since futures are exchange traded, those exchanges are then regulated by a government
body.
Source: www.investing.com/brokers/regulation
Trading Futures
Futures trading is a levered product
dealing with margin requirements, leverage and expiring contracts that may
or may not need to be rolled over to a forward month. Below are details
explaining these aspects of futures trading.
In the below example you can not only see how leverage is working, but the amount of
funds you would need to control a position of this size, whereas:
With 1 contract controlling 125,000 Euros (contract size set by the exchange)
and you having 10 contracts, you would then control 1.25 million Euros
with only $33,000.
NOTE: Margin is set and adjusted by the exchange in accordance with volatility.
Typically higher volatility will bring increased margin requirements for an asset.
Rollover
Since futures contracts expire, a trader needs to be prepared (if they are speculating
and do not want to take delivery of the asset) to rollover the contract to another
front-month (contract that has yet to expire).
NOTE: It is up to the trader how far out he wishes to go with the new contracts.
With this, the trader has successfully rolled his long position to a longer maturity.
NOTE: Many FCMs and brokers dedicate personnel towards monitoring their
clients positions and communicating with them when they need to close or roll
positions. Keep in mind that this is done on a best efforts basis and ultimately it is
your responsibility to understand the contracts that you are trading.
5 Trading Tips
There are many ways to speculate which each trader can experiment with
and decide what is best for them. Here though are a few tips that should
work with any trading method that any good successful trader can use to
build around.
Have a strategy
Putting odds in your favor through simple Reward/Risk ratios, using scaling techniques
to get in and out of trades, using specific indicators or chart patterns; all of these and
more can be used as a strategy to enter and exit trades and can be quite useful. Make
sure you know what your plan is, keep it well-defined and stick to it. This way you can
learn from it understand if changes need to be made as you progress as a trader.
Be disciplined
This is probably the hardest of all of them as it directly touches on the emotional side
of trading. You will constantly be tested by greed or fear to change your strategy and/
or your goals. Do not do this as you set those up when you were rational before the
trade was even placed. There are always exceptions to rules, but if even if this time
is different you will open yourself up to believing the next time is different too and
pretty soon you will not have any discipline at all. There is always another trade, stay
disciplined and stick to your goals and strategies.
Keep a journal
Many traders do not do this though it can be an invaluable teaching tool in showing
them their rationale of entering a trade before it occurred. Not only does it help in
showing the logic of a trade, but also details into the steps they took before they entered
the trade and if it still applies for future trades, or if adjustments need to be made.
Keeping a journal will give you great insight into aspects of your trading strategy, goals
and disciplines few other methods can do.
Expect to be wrong
Your ego will kill you in this game, but if you expect to be wrong more often than right
you will not be as affected by it. Knowing, and accepting, you will be wrong gives you
some mental stability and allows you to then focus in on what to do in order to setup
trades that gives you a good Reward to Risk ratio and protect your capital. Whether
that is putting in better risk parameters before you trade, changing your trading goals, or
staying patient and understanding there are limitless opportunities, understanding that
being wrong is part of the game changes your mental framework for the better.
Choosing a Broker
The following are key criteria to consider when choosing a futures broker:
Broker A
Broker B
Broker C
Broker D
Broker E
Source: www.investing.com/directory/futures-brokers
Commissions
Most futures brokers charge a commission of anywhere from $0.25 per side, per contract
to a few dollars per side per contract. There are times where this can be negotiated if
you are an active trader and it never hurts to ask.
Other fees
Ask your broker to list all of the fees they charge as some may charge inactive fees, wire
fees, or software fees that you may not find out until after your account is open.
Broker reputation
Check if the company is stable and well established. This can easily be done by doing
a search on the internet and reading other trader stories.
Customer support
Call to check how fast your questions are handled, if they offer software education
support, how they handle fund requests, and of course how they would handle any
trade related questions if a bad fill occurs or their software goes down.
Intangibles
There is a lot of competition between brokers that you can use to your advantage.
Many of the good ones can provide you with internal or even 3rd party resources that
smaller, less equipped brokers cannot. Some of these resources focus on daily, or even
live commentary for all offered markets which can help keep you current on events.
Trading Risks
Trading on margin involves a very high level of risk and as such may not be
suitable to those investors who are adverse to risk.
Any type of speculation that can yield an unusually high return on an
investment is subject to unusually high risk of loss as well. In saying this, before
deciding to trade Futures you should carefully consider your objectives,
level of experience, and risk appetite. You should only use surplus funds for
trading and anyone who does not have such funds should not participate
in live trading. Here are common risks associated with trading margined
Futures which include, but are not necessarily limited to the following:
Overtrading
Many traders find themselves trading because they love the excitement of it, and get
sloppy with their rules and methodologies. Overtrading occurs usually because of
boredom or an addiction to trading and must be watched closely.
Market Risk
Market Risk are risks associated with the price movement of the asset traded which
can result from a change in economic, company, environmental, or political conditions.
Liquidity Risk
Liquidity Risk results from decreased liquidity of an asset. This can be due to unanticipated
changes in economic, environmental and/or political conditions, or just because there is
a holiday. Decreases in liquidity can result in Fast Market conditions where the price of
an asset moves sharply higher or lower, or in a volatile up/down pattern.
Excessive Leverage
Leverage works for speculators when price action is favorable, but can work against
the speculator as well if the market action is not favorable. As a result, it is possible that
the amount of margin initially pledged against a trading position and the total amount
of equity in the account can be completely depleted or even be negative because of
excessive leverage used.