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Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
Lesson
# 41
FUTURES
THE
FUTURES MARKET:
A
futures contract is a promise;
the person who initially
sells the contract promises
to
deliver
a quantity of a standardize commodity to
a designated delivery point
during a certain
month
called a delivery month. The
other party to the trade promises to
pay a predetermined
price
for the goods upon
delivery. The person who promises to
buy is said to be long;
the
person
who promises to deliver is
short.
UNDERSTANDING
FUTURES MARKETS:
Why
Futures Markets?
Physical
commodities and financial instruments
typically are traded in cash
markets. A cash
contract
calls for immediate delivery
and is used by those who need a
commodity now (e.g.,
food
processors). Cash contracts cannot be
canceled unless both parties agree.
The current
cash
prices of commodities and financial
instruments can be found daily in
such sources as
The
Wall Street Journal.
There
are two types of cash
markets, spot markets and forward
markets. Spot markets
are
markets
for immediate: delivery. The
spot price refers to- the
current market price of
an
item
available for immediate
delivery.
Forward
markets are markets for
deferred delivery. The
forward price is the price
of an item
for
deferred delivery.
Futures
Contracts:
:
A
forward contract is an agreement between
two parties that calls for
delivery of a
commodity
(tangible or financial) as, a
specified future time at a
price agreed upon
today.
Each
contract has a buyer and a
seller: Forward markets have
grown primarily because
of
the
growth in swaps, which in
general are similar to
forward contracts.
·
Forward
contracts involve credit
risk--either party can default on
their obligation.
These
contracts also involve liquidity
risk because of the
difficulties involved in
getting
out of the contract. On the
other hand, forward
contracts can be customized
to
the specific needs of the,
parties involved.
A
futures contract is a standardized,
transferable agreement providing for
the deferred
delivery
of either a specified grade or
quantity of a designated commodity within
a specified
geographical
area or of a financial instrument
(or its cash value). In
simple language, a
futures
contract locks in a price
for delivery, on a future
date.
The
futures price at which this
exchange will occur at contract
maturity is determined
today.
The
trading of futures contracts
means only that commitments
have been made by
buyers
and
sellers; therefore,, "buying" and
"selling" do not have the
same meaning in
futures
transactions
as they do in stock and bond
transactions. Although these
commitments are
binding
because futures contracts
are legal contracts, a buyer
or seller can eliminate
the
commitment
simply by taking an opposite position
in-the same commodity or
financial
232
Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
instrument
for the same futures
month.
·
Futures
contracts are standardized and easily
traded. Credit risk is removed by
the
clearinghouse
(explained below) which
ensures performance on the
contract. On the
other
hand, they cannot readily be
customized to fit particular
needs.
Futures
contracts are not securities
and are not regulated by the
Securities and Exchange
Commission
(SEC). The Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (CFJC), a
federal
regulatory
agency, is responsible for
regulating trading in all
domestic futures markets.
In
practice,
the National Futures
Association, a self-regulating body,
has assumed some of
the
duties
previously performed by the
CFTC. In addition, each
futures exchange has
a
supervisory
body to oversee its
members.
Futures
vs. Options:
Some
analogies can be made between futures
contracts and options contracts.
Both involved
a
predetermined price and contract
duration. An option, however, is
precisely that. The
person
holding the option has
the right, but not
the obligation, to exercise the
put or the call.
If an
option has no value at its
expiration, the option
holder will allow it to
expire
unexercised.
But with futures contract, a
trade must occur if the
contract is held until
its
delivery
deadline. Futures contracts do
not "expire" unexercised.
One party has promised
to
deliver
a commodity, which another
party has promised to
buy.
An
important concept keep in
mind with futures is
that the purpose of contracts is
not to
provide
a means for the transfer of
goods. Stated another way,
property rights to real
or
financial
assets cannot be transferred
with futures contracts.
Futures contracts do,
however,
enable people to
reduce some of the risks
they assume in their
business.
People
who buy puts or calls do
not usually intend to exercise
them; valuable options
are
sold
before expiration day.
Similarly, an individual who is
long a corn futures
contract
usually
does not want to take
delivery of the 5,000
bushels covered by the
contract. Also, a
farmer
who has promised to deliver
wheat through the futures
market may prefer to sell
the
crop
locally rather than deliver
it to an approved delivery point. In
either case the
contract
obligation
can be satisfied by making an offsetting
trade, or trading out of the
contract. An
individual
with a long position sell a
contract, canceling the long
position. The farmer
with
short
position would buy. Both
individuals would be out of
the market after these
trades.
Market
Participants:
Two
types of participants are
required in order for a
futures market to be successful:
hedgers
and
speculators. Without hedgers
the market would not
exist, and no economic
function
would
be performed by speculators.
1.
Hedgers:
In
the context of future
market, a hedger is someone who is
engaged in some type
of
business
activity with an unacceptable level of
price risk. A farmer must
decide what crop
to
put in the ground in each
spring. The welfare of the
farmer's family or business
depends
on
the price of the chosen
commodity at harvest. If the
price is high the farmer
will earn a
nice
profit in the crop. Should
prices be low because of overabundance or
reduced demand,
and
then prices may fall to such
a level that operating costs
cannot even be
recovered.
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Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
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It is
important to recognize that
the farmer cannot eliminate
the risk of a poor crop
through
the
futures market; only price
risk can be eliminated. Crop
insurance may help
protect
against
such an eventuality, but the
futures market
cannot.
2.
Speculators:
In
order for the hedger to
eliminate unacceptable price risk,
someone must be willing
to
assume
that risk is the hedger's
place. This person is the speculator.
The speculator has no
economic
activity requiring use of
futures contract, but rather
finds attractive
investment
opportunities
there and takes positions in
futures in hopes of making a
profit rather than
protecting
one. In certain aspects, the
speculator performs the same
role that insurance
companies
perform when they prepare
policies. The person who
buys insurance is
unwilling
to
bear the full risk of
economic loss an accident occur,
consequently chooses to
transfer
that
risk to the insurance
company. The insurance
company is willing to bear
the risk
because
it feels a profit can be made by
providing this coverage in exchange
for the
insurance
premium.
A
speculator might promise to
deliver 5,000 bushels of
wheat at $ 4.00 for
September
delivery
if he or she feels that
wheat will not sell for
that much at delivery time.
Speculators
cannot
conveniently deliver wheat
because they are not in
the business of growing it,
but
this
point is not relevant
because speculators can easily exit
the market by buying
September
wheat contracts to cancel
out the previous position.
The difference in price
on
the
two trades will be the
speculator's profit or
loss.
In
considering what makes a
futures contract valuable and
what makes the price of
the
contract
fluctuate from day to day,
remember that a futures
contract is a promise to
exchange
certain goods at a future
date. You must keep your
part of the promise unless
you
get
someone to take the promise
off your hands. In other
words, you must make a
closing
transaction.
The promised goods are
valuable now, and their
value in the future may
be
more
or less than their current
worth. Prices of commodities change
for many reasons
such
as
new weather forecasts, the
availability of substitute commodities,
psychological factors,
and
changes in storage or insurance costs.
These factors all involve
shifts in demand for a
commodity,
changes in the supply of the
commodity, or both.
3.
Marketmakers:
Marketmakers
provide liquidity for the
marketplace. These people on the floor of
the
exchange
seek to buy from one person and
sell to someone else at a
slightly higher price
many
times during the day.
Marketmakers seldom have the
capital to hold large
positions
and hope prices
move in a particular way.
Their bread and butter us
earning a spread
between
the bid and ask prices
prevailing at the
moment.
Without
marketmarkes, hedgers and speculators
would face a less efficient
market. The cost
of
trading would be higher
because the spread between
buying and selling prices would
be
wider.
THE
STRUCTURE OF FUTURES
MARKETS:
Futures
Exchanges:
As
noted, futures contracts are
traded on designated futures exchanges,
which are voluntary,
nonprofit
associations, composed of members. There
are several major, U.S,
exchanges.
The
exchange provides an organized
marketplace where established rules
govern the
234
Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
(FIN630)
VU
conduct
of the members. The exchange is
financed by both membership
dues and fees
charged
for services rendered.
All
memberships must be owned by
individuals, although they
may be controlled by
firms.
The
limited number of memberships,
like stock exchange seats,
can be traded at market
determined
prices. Members can trade for their
own accounts or as agents
for others. For
example,
floor traders trade for their
own accounts, whereas floor
brokers (or
commission
brokers)
often act as agents for
others. Futures commission
merchants (FCMs) act as
agents
for
the general public, for
which they receive
commissions. Thus, a customer can
establish
an
account with an FCM, who in
turn may work through a
floor broker at the
exchange.
The
Clearing House:
The
clearinghouse, a corporation separate
from, but associated with,
each exchange plays
an
important
role in every futures
transaction. Since all futures
trades are cleared through
the
clearinghouse
each business day, exchange
members must either be members of
the
clearinghouse
or pay a member for this
service. From a financial
requirement basis, being
a
member
of the clearinghouse is more
demanding than being a
member of the
associated
exchange.
Essentially,
the clearinghouse for
futures markets operates in
the same way as
the
clearinghouse
for options. Buyers and
sellers settle with the
clearinghouse, not each
other.
Thus,
the clearinghouse, and not-
another investor, is actually on
the other side of
every
transaction
and ensures that all
payments are made as
specified. It stands ready to
fulfill a
contract
if either buyer or seller
^defaults, thereby helping to
facilitate an orderly market
in
futures.
The clearinghouse makes the
futures market impersonal,
which is the key to
its
success,
because any buyer or seller
can always close out a position and be
assured of
payment.
The first failure of a
clearinghouse member in modern
times occurred in the
1980s, and
the system worked perfectly
in preventing any customer
from losing money.
Finally,
as explained below, the
clearinghouse allows participants
easily to reverse a
position
before maturity, because the
clearinghouse keeps trade of each
participant's
obligations.
THE
MECHANICS OF TRADING:
Basic
Procedures:
Because
the futures contract is
a-commitment to buy or sell at a
specified future
settlement
date,
a contract is not really
.being solder bought, as in
tire case of Treasury bills,
stocks, or
Certificate's
of Deposit (CDs), because no
money is exchanged at the
time the contract is
negotiated.
Instead, the seller and the
buyer simply are agreeing to make and
take delivery,
respectively,
at some future, time for a
price: agreed upon today. As
noted above, the
terms
buy
and sell do not have the
same meanings here. It is
more accurate to
think
in terms of;
1. A
short position (seller),
which commits a trader to
deliver an item at
contract
maturity.
2. A
long position (buyer), which
commits a trader to purchase an item at
contract
maturity
Selling
short in futures trading
means only that a contract
not previously purchased is
sold.
For every futures contract,
some one sold it short and
someone else holds it long.
Like
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Investment
Analysis & Portfolio Management
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options,
futures trading are a
zero-sum game.
Whereas an
options contract involves
the right to make or take delivery, a
futures contract
involves
an 'obligation to take or make delivery.
However, futures contracts can be
settled
by
delivery or by offset. Delivery, or
settlement of the contract,
occurs in months that
are
designated
by the various exchanges for
each of the items traded.
Delivery occurs in
less
than
2 percent of all
transactions.
Offset
is the typical method of
settling a contract. Indeed,
about 95 percent of
futures
contracts
are closed before the
contract expire by offset.
Holders liquidate a position
by
arranging
an offsetting transaction. This
means that buyers sell
their positions, and
sellers
buy
in their positions sometime
prior to delivery. When an
investor offsets his or
her
position,
it means that their trading
account is adjusted to reflect
the final gains (or
losses)
arid
their position is closed.
Thus,
to eliminate futures market
position, the investor
.simply does the reverse of
what was
done
originally. As explained above, the
clearinghouse makes this
easy to accomplish. It is
essential to
remember that if a futures
contract is not offset, it
must be closed out by
delivery.
·
An
option involves the right,
but not the obligation to
take action
·
A
futures contract involves an
obligation either offset
occurs or delivery
occurs.
Margin:
Recall
that in the case of stock
transactions, the term
margin refers to the down
payment in
a
transaction in which money is
borrowed from the broker to
finance the total cost.
Futures
margin,
on the other hand, is not a
down payment, because
ownership of the
underlying
item
is not being transferred at
the time of the transaction.
Instead, it refers to the
"good
faith"
(or earnest money) deposit
made by both buyer and
seller to ensure the
completion
of
the contract. In futures
trading, unlike stock
trading, margin is the norm.
All futures
markets
participants, whether buyers or
sellers, must deposit minimum
specified amounts
in
their futures margin
accounts to guarantee contract
obligations.
·
In
effect; futures margin is a
performance bond.
Each
clearinghouse sets its own
minimum initial margin
requirements (in
dollars).
Furthermore,
brokerage houses can require a higher
margin and typically do so.
The margin
required
for futures contracts, which
is small in relation to the
value of the contract
itself,
represents
the equity of the transactor
(either buyer or seller). It is
not unusual for the
initial
margin
to be only a few thousand
dollars although the value
of the contract is much
larger.
As a
generalized approximation, the
margin requirement for
futures contracts is about
6
percent
of the value of the
contract. Since the equity is
small, the risk is
magnified.
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