Advanced Trading Knowledge: Colibri Trader
Advanced Trading Knowledge: Colibri Trader
Advanced Trading Knowledge: Colibri Trader
Advanced Trading
Knowledge
General Introduction to Futures
By
Colibri Trader
Forward Contracts: A brief history of futures
Now if the price of cattle rises, the cattle supplier will lose out as he could have
owner will still have to sell his cattle at the purchased his supply of cattle at a cheaper
agreed price and will lose out on the price. This introduces the concept of
difference between the current price and opportunity cost. The opportunity cost of
the agreed price. The meat supplier on the these two parties entering into business is
other hand will benefit since he will pay the the chance that they make a profit or a loss
agreed price and not the current, higher from the price of the cattle in the future.
price. The cattle owners loss is exactly offset Now, if one of the parties cannot or won’t
by the meat supplier’s gain. However if the commit to their agreement, the deal would
price of cattle falls, the cattle owner will be off and the other party would be at a
benefit, since he will sell his cattle at the disadvantage. This is the risk of default that
agreed price which is higher than the both parties take, i.e. when one party
current market price, but now the meat cannot or won’t honour their agreement.
Forward Contracts: A brief history of futures
In summary:
underlying asset on the delivery date is called the settlement price. forward contract, but the quantity, settlement date, type of
product, quality etc. are all specified by the exchange. The clearing
house guarantees all the trades and if a party defaults, it is the
clearinghouse’s obligation to make up for the loss.
Example:
Contract specification for one Corn futures contract traded on CBOT (Chicago Board of
Trade)
A futures contract gives the holder the obligation to buy or sell. In
❖
other words, both parties of a "futures contract" must fulfil the Size - 5,000 bushels – number of bushels of corn per contract
contract on the settlement date. The seller delivers the commodity Tick Size - $0.025/bushel – minimum price increment the contract can move price
by( $12.5 per contract )
to the buyer, or, if it is a cash-settled future, then cash is transferred Daily Price Limit - $0.20/bushel – maximum change in price per day (up or down)
from the futures trader who sustained a loss to the one who made Contract Months - Dec, Mar, May, Jul, Sep – months where contracts expire(settlement
months)
a profit. To exit the commitment prior to the settlement date, the
Last Trading Day - Seventh business day proceeding the last business day of the
holder of a futures position has to offset their position by either delivery month
selling a long position or buying back a short position, effectively
closing out the futures position and its contract obligations. As can be seen from the example above, these are the terms a
❖
❖ It is a standardised contract
❖ It is traded on an exchange and ❖ There is little or no flexibility to
therefore has a high level of availability customise the contract to meet the
and liquidity parties needs.
❖ Performance is guaranteed by the ❖ The contract has to be marked to
❖ Hedging
❖ Speculating
❖ Opportunities to arbitrage take place throughout the world markets,
and derivatives are sometimes used to exploit these. Practitioners
❖ Speculation is more commonly used by hedge funds or traders who aim working within risk finance or quantitative finance often develop
to generate profits with only a marginal investment, essentially placing a models to price various assets being traded across the markets, and
bet on the movement of an asset. Although speculation can produce a upon finding price discrepancies, one can make use of a specific
high return on investment, the downside risks are equally as prominent combination of derivatives in order make a riskless profit.
as demonstrated by the collapse of Long Term Capital Management in
September of 1998. Because of the high degree of leverage one can take
in speculative contracts, an adverse change in prices could result in
rapidly increasing debt and a portfolio worth millions could fall to
almost zero with the space of a few hours.
Dangers of Derivatives