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Futures
Trading Market Terminology
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GLOSSARY
TERMS
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Across the Board
Actuals
Arbitrage
Arbitration
Assignment
At the market
At-the-money
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Bar
chart
Basis
Bear call spread
Bear market (bear/bearish)
Bear put spread
Bear spread
Bid
Board of trade
Bearish
Beta
Board orders
Break
Break-even
Broker
Bullish
Bull call spread
Bull market (bull/bullish)
Bull put spread
Bull spread
Butterfly spread
Buy stop/sell stop orders
Buyer
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Calendar spread
Call
Call option
Carrying charges
Carryover
Cash commodity/cash market
Cash flow
Cash forward contract
Cash market
Cash price
Cash settlement
Certificate of Deposit (CD)
Certificated stock
Charting
Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT)
Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME)
Churning
Clearinghouse
Clearing margin
Clearing member
Close or closing range
Coffee, Sugar & Cocoa Exchange
Commercials
Commission
Commission house
Commodity
Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC)
Commodity Exchange (COMEX)
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
Commodity pool
Commodity Pool Operator (CPO)
Commodity-Product Spread
Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA)
Confirmation statement
Congestion
Contract
Contract market
Contract month
Controlled account
Contrarian Theory
Convergence
Conversion
Conversion factor
Cover
Covered position
Crack spread
Cross-hedge
Crush spread
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Day
order
Day-trader
Dealer option
Debt instruments
Deck
Deep in-the-money
Deep out-of-the-money
Default
Deferred delivery
Deferred pricing
Delivery
Delivery month
Delivery notice
Delivery point
Delta
Demand
Diagonal spread
Direct hedge
Discount
Discount rate
Discretionary accounts
Downtrend
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Economic good
Economy of scale
Efficiency
Elasticity
Equity
Eurodollar Time Deposits
Even up
Exchange
Exchange rates
Expiration date
Ex-pit transactions
Exercise
Expiration
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Federal Reserve Board
Fill or Kill order (FOK)
Financial futures
First notice day
Floor broker
Floor trader
Forward contract
Forward pricing
Free market
Full carry
Fundamental analysis
Futures Commission Merchant (FCM)
Futures contract
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Gambler
Gap
Geometric index
Give-up
Good till Cancelled (GTC)
Grantor
Guarantee Fund
Guided account
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Hedge ratio
Hedger
Hedging
High
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Inelasticity
In-the-money
Index
Inflation
Initial margin
Interest
Interest rate futures
Inter-market
Intra-market
Intrinsic value
Introducing Broker (IB)
Inverted market
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Kansas
City Board of Trade (KCBT)
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Last Trading Day
Law of Demand
Law of Supply
Letter of acknowledgment
Leverage
Liability
Limit move
Limit orders
Limited Risk
Limited Risk Spread
Line-bar chart
Liquidate
Liquidity (liquid market)
Locals
Long
Long hedge
Long-the-basis
Low
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Maintenance margin
Managed Account
Margin
Margin call
Mark-to-market
Market-if-touched order (MIT)
Market order
Market-share weighted index
Market-value weighted index
Maturity
Maximum price fluctuation
MidAmerica Commodity Exchange (MACE)
Minimum price fluctuation
Minneapolis Grain Exchange
Monthly statement
Moving average
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Naked
National Futures Association (NFA)
Nearby
Net position
Neutral calendar spread
New York Cotton Exchange (NYCE)
New York Futures Exchange (NYFE)
New York Mercantile Exchange (NYME)
Nominal price (or nominal quotation)
Normal market
Notice of intention to deliver
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Offer
Offset
Offsetting
Offsetting positions
Omnibus account
One Cancels Other (OCO)
interest
outcry
trade equity
ng range
Opportunity cost
Option seller
Option contract
Order
Original margin
Out-of-the-money
Overbought
Oversold
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Pit
Pit broker
Point
Point and figure chart
Point balance
Pool
Position
Portfolio
Position limit
Position trader
Power of attorney
Premium
Price
Price discovery mechanism
Price limit
Price weighted index
Primary markets
Purchase and sale statement
Purchaser
Pure hedging
Put
Pyramiding
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Quotation
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Rally
Range
Ratio writing
Recovery
Registered Commodity Representative (RCR)
Regulations (CFTC)
Reparations
Reportable positions
Reporting level
Resistance
Retender
Ring
Risk Disclosure
Document
Rolling hedge
Round turn
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Scalper
Security deposit
Segregated account
Selective hedging
Sell stop order
Selling hedge
Settlement
Settlement price
Short
Short covering
Short hedge
Short-the-basis
Sideways
Special account
Speculation
Speculator
Spot
Spread
Spreading
Stock Index Futures
Stop orders
Stopped out
Storage
Straddle
Strangle spread
Strike price
Strong basis
Summary suspension
Supply
Support
Surplus fund
Synthetic position
Systematic risk
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Technical analysis
Technician
Terms
Tick
Time Value
Trading range
Trend
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Underlying
futures contract
Unsystematic risk
Uptrend
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Value
Variable limits
Variation margin call
Vertical spreads
Volatile
Volume
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Wash sales
Wasting asset
Weak basis
Writer
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Yield
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Across
the board: All the months of a particular
futures contract or futures option contract, for example,
if all the copper contractslimit up, they were limit
up "across the board."
Actuals:
The physical or cash commodity, which is different
from a futures contract. See Cash commodity.
ArbitrageThe
purchase of a commodity against the simultaneous sale
of a commodity to profit from unequal prices. The two
transactions may take place on different exchanges,
between two different commodities, in different delivery
months, or between the cash and futures markets. See
Spreading.
Arbitration:
The procedure available to customers for the settlement
of disputes. Brokers and exchange members are required
to participate in arbitration to settle disputes. Arbitration
is available through the exchanges, the NFA, and the
CFTC.
Assignment:
Options are exercised through the option purchaser's
broker, who notifies the clearinghouse of the option's
exercise. The clearinghouse then notifies the option
seller that the buyer has exercised. When futures options
are exercised, the buyer of a call is assigned a long
futures contract, and the seller receives the corresponding
short. Conversely, the buyer of a put is assigned a
short futures contract upon exercise, while the seller
receives the corresponding long.
At
the market: When issued, this order is to buy
or sell a futures or options contract as soon as possible
at the best possible price. See Market order.
At-the-money:
An option is at-the-money when its strike price
is equal, or approximately equal, to the current market
price of the underlying futures contract.
Bar
chart: A graphic representation of price movement
disclosing the high, low, close, and sometimes theng
prices for the day. A vertical line is drawn to correspond
with the price range for the day, while a horizontal
"tick" pointing to the left reveals theng price,
and a tick to the right indicates the closing price.
After days of charting, patterns start to emerge, which
technicians interpret for their price predictions.
Basis:
The difference between the cash price and the futures
price of a commodity. CASH - FUTURES = BASIS. Basis
also is used to refer to the difference between prices
at different markets or between different commodity
grades.
Bear
call spread: The purchase of a call with a high
strike price against the sale of a call with a lower
strike price. The maximum profit receivable is the net
premium received (premium received - premium paid),
while the maximum loss is calculated by subtracting
the net premium received from the difference between
the high strike price and the low strike price (high
strike price - low strike price net premium received).
A bear call spread should be entered when lower prices
are expected. It is a type of vertical spread.
Bear
market (bear/bearish): When prices are declining,
the market is said to be a "bear market"; individuals
who anticipate lower prices are "bears." Situations
believed to bring with them lower prices are considered
"bearish."
Bear
put spread: The purchase of a put with a high
strike price against the sale of a put with a lower
strike price in expectation of declining prices. The
maximum profit is calculated as follows: (high strike
price - low strike price) - net premium received where
net premium received = premiums paid - premiums received.
Bear
spread: Sale of a near month futures contract
against the purchase of a deferred month futures contract
in expectation of a price decline in the near month
relative to the more distant month. Example: selling
a December contract and buying the more distant March
contract.
Bearish:
When market prices tend to go lower, the market
is said to be bearish. Someone who expects prices to
trend lower is "bearish."
Beta:
A measure correlating stock price movement to the
movement of an index. Beta is used to determine the
number of contracts required to hedge with stock index
futures or futures options.
Bid:
The request to buy a futures contract at a specified
price; the opposite of offer.
Board
of trade: An exchange or association of
persons participating in the business of buying or selling
any commodity or receiving it for sale on consignment.
Generally, an exchange where commodity futures and/or
futures options are traded. See also Contract market and Exchange.
Board
orders: See Market if touched order.
Break:
A sudden price move; prices may break up or down.
Break-even:
Refers to a price at which an option's cost is equal
to the proceeds acquired by exercising the option. The
buyer of a call pays a premium. His break-even point
is calculated by adding the premium paid to the call's
strike price. For example, if you purchase a May 58
cotton call for 2.25¢ per pound when May cotton futures
are at 59.48¢/lb., the break-even price is 60.25¢/lb.
(58.00¢/lb. + 2.25¢/lb. = 60.25¢/lb.). For a put purchaser,
the break-even point is calculated by subtracting the
premium paid from the put's strike price. Please note
that, for puts, you do not exercise unless the futures
price is below the break-even point.
Broker:
An agent who executes trades (buy or sell orders)
for customers. He receives a commission for these services.
Other terms used to describe a broker include: a) Account
Executive (AE), b) Associated Person (AP), c) Registered
Commodity Representative (RCR), d) NFA Associate.
Bull
call spread: The purchase of a call with a low
strike price against the sale of a call with a higher
strike price; prices are expected to rise. The maximum
potential profit is calculated as follows: (high strike
price - low strike price) - net premium cost, where
net premium cost = premiums paid - premiums received.
The maximum possible loss is the net premium cost.
Bull
market (bull/bullish): When prices are rising,
the market is said to be a "bull market"; individuals
who anticipate higher prices are considered "bulls."
Situations arising which are expected to bring higher
prices are called "bullish."
Bull
put spread: The purchase of a put with a low
strike price against the sale of a call with a higher
strike price; prices are expected to rise. The maximum
potential profit equals the net premium received. The
maximum loss is calculated as follows: (high strike
price - low strike price) - net premium received where
net premium received = premiums paid - premiums received.
Bull
spread: The purchase of near month futures contracts
against the sale of deferred month futures contracts
in expectation of a price rise in the near month relative
to the deferred. One type of bull spread, the limited
risk spread, is placed only when the market is near
full carrying charges. See Limited risk spread.
Bullish:
A tendency for prices to move up.
Butterfly
spread: Established by buying an at-the-money
option, selling 2 out-of-the money options, and buying
an out-of-the money option. A butterfly is entered anytime
a credit can be received; i.e., the premiums received
are more than those paid.
Buy
stop/sell stop orders: See Stop orders.
Buyer:
Anyone who enters the market to purchase a good
or service. For futures, a buyer can be establishing
a new position by purchasing a contract (going long),
or liquidating an existing short position. Puts and
calls can also be bought, giving the buyer the right
to purchase or sell an underlying futures contract at
a set price within a certain period of time.
Calendar
spread: The sale of an option with a nearby
expiration against the purchase of an option with the
same strike price, but a more distant expiration. The
loss is limited to the net premium paid, while the maximum
profit possible depends on the time value of the distant
option when the nearby expires. The strategy takes advantage
of time value differentials during periods of relatively
flat prices.
Call:
The period at marketng or closing during which
futures contract prices are established by auction.
Call
option: A contract giving the buyer the right
to purchase something within a certain period of time
at a specified price. The seller receives money (the
premium) for the sale of this right. The contract also
obligates the seller to deliver, if the buyer exercises
his right to purchase.
Carrying
charges: The cost of storing a physical commodity,
consisting of interest on the invested funds, insurance,
storage fees, and other incidental costs. Carrying costs
are usually reflected in the difference between futures
prices for different delivery months. When futures prices
for deferred contract maturities are higher than for
nearby maturities, it is a carrying charge market. A
full carrying charge market reimburses the owner of
the physical commodity for its storage until the delivery
date.
Carryover:
The portion of existing supplies remaining from
a prior production period.
Cash
commodity/cash market: The actual or physical
commodity. The market in which the physical commodity
is traded, as opposed to the futures market, where contracts
for future delivery of the physical commodity are traded.
See also Actuals.
Cash
flow: The cash receipts and payments of a business.
This differs from net income after taxes in that non-cash
expenses are not included in a cash flow statement.
If more cash comes in than goes out, there is a positive
cash flow, while more outgoing cash causes a negative
cash flow.
Cash
forward contract: See Forward contract.
Cash
market: A market in which goods are purchased
either immediately for cash, as in a cash and carry
contract, or where they are contracted for presently,
with delivery occurring at the time of payment. All
terms of the contract are negotiated between the buyer
and seller.
Cash
price: The cost of a good or service when purchased
for cash. In commodity trading, the cash price is the
cost of buying the physical commodity on the current
day in the spot market, rather than buying contracts
in the futures market.
Cash
settlement: Instead of having the actuals delivered,
cash is transferred upon settlement.
Certificate
of Deposit (CD): A large time deposit with a
bank, having a specific maturity date and yield stated
on the certificate. CDs usually are issued with $100,000
to $1,000,000 face values.
Certificated
stock: Stocks of a physical commodity that have
been inspected by the exchange and found to be acceptable
for delivery on a futures contract. They are stored
at designated delivery points.
Charting:
When technicians analyze the futures markets, they
employ graphs and charts to plot the price movements,
volume,interest, or other statistical indicators
of price movement. See also Technical analysis and Bar chart.
Chicago
Board of Trade (CBOT): Founded in 1848 with
82 original members, it had an active cash and forward
contracting business at first. Although the records
were destroyed in the fire of 1871, it is agreed that
futures contracts were being traded there during the
1860s. Today, the CBOT is the largest exchange in the
world. It is known for its grain, gold, and Treasury
Bond futures, as well as options on T-Bond futures.
The Chicago Board of Trade is located at 141 W. Jackson
Blvd., Chicago, IL 60604.
Chicago
Mercantile Exchange (CME): The second largest
futures exchange in the United States. Originally formed
in 1874 as the Chicago Produce Exchange, the "Chicago
Merc" was primarily a perishable agricultural products
market (butter, eggs, poultry, etc.). The name was changed
in 1919, and since then the CME has been an innovator
in the industry. The CME trades financial futures, options,
and stock index futures contracts. The CME is the largest
exchange for futures contracts in live commodities,
foreign currencies, and Eurodollars. Foreign currencies
contracts traded include: German Mark, Canadian Dollar,
French Franc, Swiss Franc, Mexican Peso, British Pound,
Australian Dollar, and Japanese Yen. Futures contracts
on the S&P 500, Nikkei 250, Major Market Index,
and S&P 100 Stock Indexes and options on many of
the their futures contracts are also traded at the CME.
The CME is located at 30 S. Wacker Dr., Chicago, IL
60606.
Churning:
When a broker engages in excessive trading to derive
a profit from commissions while ignoring his client's
best interests.
Clearing
margin: Funds deposited by a futures commission
merchant with its clearing member.
Clearing
member: A clearinghouse member responsible for
executing client trades. Clearing members also monitor
the financial capability of their clients by requiring
sufficient margins and position reports.
Clearinghouse:
An agency associated with an exchange which guarantees
all trades, thus assuring contract delivery and/or financial
settlement. The clearinghouse becomes the buyer for
every seller, and the seller for every buyer.
Close
or closing range: The range of prices found
during the last two minutes of trading. The average
price during the "close" is used as the settlement price
from which the allowable trading range is set for the
following day.
Coffee,
Sugar & Cocoa Exchange: Founded in 1882
as the Coffee Exchange of the City of New York. In 1916,
the exchange changed its name to the New York Coffee
and Sugar Exchange, Inc., and in 1979 to the Coffee,
Sugar & Cocoa Exchange, Inc., when it merged with
the New York Cocoa Exchange, Inc. Today, it is known
for its coffee, sugar, and cocoa contracts and is located
at 4 World Trade Center, New York, NY 10048.
Commercials:
Firms that are actively hedging their cash grain
positions in the futures markets; e.g., millers, exporters,
and elevators.
Commission:
The fee which clearing-houses charge their clients
to buy and sell futures and futures options contracts.
The fee that brokers charge their clients is also called
a commission.
Commission
house: Another term used to describe brokerage
firms because they earn their living by charging commissions.
See also Futures Commission Merchant.
Commodity:
A good or item of trade or commerce. Goods tradable
on an exchange, such as corn, gold, or hogs, as distinguished
from instruments or other intangibles like T-Bills or
stock indexes.
Commodity
Credit Corporation (CCC): A government-owned
corporation established in 1933 to support prices through
purchases of excess crops, to control supply through
acreage reduction programs, and to devise export programs.
Commodity
Exchange (COMEX): Formed in 1933, when four
different exchanges trading metals, rubber, silk, and
hides merged. Today, the COMEX is a division of the
New York Mercantile Exchange and is known for its metals,
including gold, silver, aluminum, and copper. It is
located at 4 World Trade Center, New York, NY 10048.
Commodity
Futures Trading Commission (CFTC): A federal
regulatory agency established in 1974 to administer
the Commodity Exchange Act. This agency monitors the
futures and futures options markets through the exchanges,
futures commission merchants and their agents, floor
brokers, and customers who use the markets for either
commercial or investment purposes.
Commodity
pool: A venture where several persons contribute
funds to trade futures or futures options. A commodity
pool is not to be confused with a joint account.
Commodity
Pool Operator (CPO): An individual or firm who
accepts funds, securities, or property for trading commodity
futures contracts, and combines customer funds into
pools. The larger the account, or pool, the more staying
power the CPO and his clients have. They may be able
to last through a dip in prices until the position becomes
profitable. CPOs must register with the CFTC and NFA,
and are closely regulated.
Commodity-product
spread: The simultaneous purchase (or sale)
of a commodity and the sale (or purchase) of the products
derived from that commodity; for example, buying soybeans
and selling soybean oil and meal. This is known as a
crush spread. Another example is the crack spread, where
the crude oil is purchased and gasoline and heating
oil are sold.
Commodity
Trading Advisor (CTA): An individual or firm
who directly or indirectly advises others about buying
or selling futures or futures options. Analyses, reports,
or newsletters concerning futures may be issued by a
CTA; he may also engage in placing trades for other
people's accounts. CTAs are required to be registered
with the CFTC and to belong to the NFA.
Confirmation
statement: After a futures or options position
has been initiated, a statement must be issued to the
customer by the commission house. The statement contains
the number of contracts bought or sold, and the prices
at which the transactions occurred, and is sometimes
combined with a purchase and sale statement.
Congestion:
A charting term used to describe an area of sideways
price movement. Such a range is thought to provide support
or resistance to price action.
Contract:
A legally enforceable agreement between two or more
parties for performing, or refraining from performing,
some specified act; e.g., delivering 5,000 bushels of
corn at a specified grade, time, place, and price.
Contract
market: Designated by the CFTC, a contract market
is a board of trade set up to trade futures or option
contracts, and generally means any exchange on which
futures are traded. See Board
of trade and Exchange.
Contract
month: The month in which a contract comes due
for delivery according to the futures contract terms.
Controlled
account: See Discretionary accounts.
Contrarian
theory: A theory suggesting that the general
consensus about trends is wrong. The contrarian takes
the opposite position from the majority opinion to capitalize
on overbought or oversold situations.
Convergence:
The coming together of futures prices and cash market
prices on the last trading day of a futures contract.
Conversion:
The sale of a cash position and investment of part
of the proceeds in the margin for a long futures position.
The remaining money is placed in an interest-bearing
instrument. This practice allows the investor/dealer
to receive high rates of interest, and take delivery
of the commodity if needed.
Conversion
factor: A figure published by the CBOT used
to adjust a T-Bond hedge for the difference in maturity
between the T-Bond contract specifications and the T-Bonds
being hedged.
Cover:
Used to indicate the repurchase of previously sold
contracts as, he covered his short position. Short covering
is synonymous with liquidating a short position or evening
up a short position.
Covered
position: A transaction which has been offset
with an opposite and equal transaction; for example,
if a gold futures contract had been purchased, and later
a call option for the same commodity amount and delivery
date was sold, the trader's option position is "covered."
He holds the futures contract deliverable on the option
if it is exercised. Also used to indicate the repurchase
of previously sold contracts as, he covered his short
position.
Crack
spread: A type of commodity-product spread involving
the purchase of crude oil futures and the sale of gasoline
and heating oil futures.
Cross-hedge:
A hedger's cash commodity and the commodities traded
on an exchange are not always of the same type, quality,
or grade. Therefore, a hedger may have to select a similar
commodity (one with similar price movement) for his
hedge. This is known as a "cross-hedge."
Crush
spread: A type of commodity-product spread which
involves the purchase of soybean futures and the sale
of soybean oil and soybean meal futures.
Day
order: An order which, if not executed during
the trading session the day it is entered, automatically
expires at the end of the session. All orders are assumed
to be day orders unless specified otherwise.
Day-trader:
Futures or options traders (often active on the
trading floor) who usually initiate and offset position
during a single trading session.
Dealer
option: A put or call on a physical good written
by a firm dealing in the underlying cash commodity.
A dealer option does not originate on, nor is it subject
to the rules of an exchange.
Debt
instruments: 1) Generally, legal IOUs created
when one person borrows money from (becomes indebted
to) another person; 2) Any commercial paper, bank CDs,
bills, bonds, etc.; 3) A document evidencing a loan
or debt. Debt instruments such as T-Bills and T-Bonds
are traded on the CME and CBOT, respectively.
Deck:
All orders in a floor broker's possession that have
not yet been executed.
Deep
in-the-money: An option is "deep in-the
money" when it is so far in-the-money that it is unlikely
to go out-of-the-money prior to expiration. It is an
arbitrary term and can be used to describe different
options by different people.
Deep
out-of-the-money: Used to describe an option
that is unlikely to go into-the-money prior to expiration.
An arbitrary term.
Default:
Failure to meet a margin call or to make or take
delivery. The failure to perform on a futures contract
as required by exchange rules.
Deferred
delivery: Futures trading in distant delivery
months.
Deferred
pricing: A method of pricing where a producer
sells his commodity now and buys a futures contract
to benefit from an expected price increase. Although
some people call this hedging, the producer is actually
speculating that he can make more money by selling the
cash commodity and buying a futures contract than by
storing the commodity and selling it later. (If the
commodity has been sold, what could he be hedging against?)
Delivery:
The transportation of a physical commodity (actuals
or cash) to a specified destination in fulfillment of
a futures contract.
Delivery
month: The month during which a futures contract
expires, and delivery is made on that contract.
Delivery
notice: Notification of delivery by the clearinghouse
to the buyer. Such notice is initiated by the seller
in the form of a "Notice of Intention to Deliver."
Delivery
point: The location approved by an exchange
for tendering and accepting goods deliverable according
to the terms of a futures contract.
Delta:
The correlation factor between a futures price fluctuation
and the change in premium for the option on that futures
contract. Delta changes from moment to moment as the
option premium changes.
Demand:
The desire to purchase economic goods or services
(and the financial ability to do so) at the market price
constitutes demand. When many purchasers demand a good
at the market price, their combined purchasing power
constitutes "demand." As this combined demand increases
or decreases, other things remaining constant, the price
of the good tends to rise or fall.
Derivative:
A financial instrument whose characteristics and
value are based on the characteristics and value of
another financial instrument or product.
Diagonal
spread: Uses options with different expiration
dates and different strike prices; for example, a trader
might purchase a 26 December German Mark put and sell
a 28 September German Mark put when the futures price
is $.2600/DM.
Direct
hedge: When the hedger has (or needs) the commodity
(grade, etc.) specified for delivery in the futures
contract, he is "direct hedging." When he does not have
the specified commodity, he is cross hedging.
Discount:
1) Quality differences between those standards set
for some futures contracts and the quality of the delivered
goods. If inferior goods are tendered for delivery,
they are graded below the standard, and a lesser amount
is paid for them. They are sold at a discount; 2) Price
differences between futures of different delivery months;
3) For short-term financial instruments, "discount"
may be used to describe the way interest is paid. Short-term
instruments are purchased at a price below the face
value (discount). At maturity, the full face value is
paid to the purchaser. The interest is imputed, rather
than being paid as coupon interest during the term of
the instrument; for example, if a T-Bill is purchased
for $974,150, the price is quoted at 89.66, or a discount
of 10.34% = 10.34). At maturity, the
holder receives $1,000,000.
Discount
rate: The interest rate charged by the
Federal Reserve to its member banks (banks which belong
to the Federal Reserve System) for funds they borrow.
This rate has a direct bearing on the interest rates
banks charge their customers. When the discount rate
is increased, the banks must raise the rates they charge
to cover their increased cost of borrowing. Likewise,
when the discount rate is lowered, banks are able to
charge lower interest rates on their loans.
Discretionary
accounts: An arrangement in which an account
holder gives power of attorney to another person, usually
his broker, to make decisions to buy or to sell without
notifying the owner of the account. Discretionary accounts
often are called "managed" or "controlled" accounts.
Downtrend:
A channel of downward price movement.
Economic
good: That which is scarce and useful to
mankind.
Economy
of scale: A lower cost per unit produced,
achieved through large-scale production. The lower cost
can result from better tools of production, greater
discounts on purchased supplies, production of by-products,
and/or equipment or labor used at production levels
closer to capacity. A large cattle feeding operation
may be able to benefit from economies such as lower
unit feed costs, increased mechanization, and lower
unit veterinary costs .
Efficiency:
Because of futures contracts' standardization of terms,
large numbers of traders from all walks of life may
trade futures, thus allowing prices to be determined
readily (it is more likely that someone will want a
contract at any given price). The more readily prices
are discovered, the more efficient are the markets.
Elasticity:
A term used to describe the effects price, supply, and
demand have on one another for a particular commodity.
A commodity is said to have elastic demand when a price
change affects the demand for that commodity; it has
supply elasticity when a change in price causes a change
in the production of the commodity. A commodity has
inelastic supply or demand when they are unaffected
by a change in price.
Equity:
The value of a futures trading account with all
positions valued at the going market price.
Eurodollar
Time Deposits: U.S. dollars on deposit
outside the United States, either with a foreign bank
or a subsidiary of a U.S. bank. The interest paid for
these dollar deposits generally is higher than that
for funds deposited in U.S. banks because the foreign
banks are riskier_they will not be supported or nationalized
by the U.S. government upon default. Furthermore, they
may pay higher rates of interest because they are not
regulated by the U.S. government.
Even
up: To close out, liquidate, or cover anposition.
Exchange:
An association of persons who participate in the business
of buying or selling futures contracts or futures options.
A forum or place where traders (members) gather to buy
or sell economic goods. There are 9 domestic futures
exchanges currently operating as non-profit member organizations.
See also Board of trade or Contract market.
Exchange
rates: The price of foreign currencies.
If it costs $.42 to buy one Swiss Franc, the exchange
rate is .4200. As one currency is inflated faster or
slower than the other, the exchange rate will change,
reflecting the change in relative value. The currency
being inflated faster is said to be becoming weaker
because more of it must be exchanged for the same amount
of the other currency. As a currency becomes weaker,
exports are encouraged because others can buy more with
their relatively stronger currencies.
Exercise:
When a call purchaser takes delivery of the underlying
long futures position, or when a put purchaser takes
delivery of the underlying short futures position. Only
option buyers may "exercise" their options; option sellers
have a passive position.
Expiration:
An option is a wasting asset; i.e., it has a limited
life, usually nine months. At the end of its life, it
either becomes worthless (if it is at-the-money or out-of-the-money),
or is automatically exercised for the amount by which
it is in-the-money.
Expiration
date: The final date when an option may
be exercised. Many options expire on a specified date
during the month prior to the delivery month for the
underlying futures contract.
Ex-pit
transactions: Occurring outside the futures
exchange trading pits. This includes cash transactions,
the delivery process, and the changing of brokerage
firms while maintainingpositions. All other transactions
involving futures contracts must occur in the trading
pits throughoutcry.
Federal
Reserve Board: A board of Directors comprised
of seven members which directs the federal banking system,
is appointed by the President of the United States and
confirmed by the Senate. The functions of the board
include formulating and executing monetary policy, overseeing
the Federal Reserve Banks, and regulating and supervising
member banks. Monetary policy is implemented through
the purchase or sale of securities, and by raising or
lowering the discount rate—the interest rate at which
banks borrow from the Federal Reserve.
Fill
or Kill order (FOK): Also known as a quick
order, is a limit order which, if not filled immediately,
is canceled.
Financial
futures: Include interest rate futures,
currency futures, and index futures. The financial futures
market currently is the fastest growing of all the futures
markets.
First
notice day: Notice of intention to deliver
a commodity in fulfillment of an expiring futures contract
can be given to the clearinghouse by a seller (and assigned
by the clearinghouse to a buyer) no earlier than the
first notice day. First notice days differ depending
on the commodity.
Floor
broker: A person who executes orders on
the trading floor of an exchange on behalf of other
people. They are also known as pit brokers because the
trading area has steps down into a "pit" where the brokers
stand to execute their trades.
Floor
trader: Exchange members present on the
exchange floor to make trades on their own behalf. They
may be referred to as scalpers or locals.
Forward
contract: A contract entered into by two
parties who agree to the future purchase or sale of
a specified commodity. This differs from a futures contract
in that the participants in a forward contract are contracting
directly with each other, rather than through a clearing
corporation. The terms of a forward contract are negotiated
between the buyer and seller, while exchanges set the
terms of futures contracts.
Forward
pricing: The practice of locking in a price
in the future, either by entering into a cash forward
contract or a futures contract. In a cash forward contract,
the parties usually intend to tender and accept the
commodity, while futures contracts are generally offset,
with a cash transaction occurring after offset.
Free
market: A market place where individuals
can act in their own best interest, free from outside
forces (freedom means freedom from government) restricting
their choices, or regulating or subsidizing product
prices. Free market also refers to the political system
where the means of production are owned by free, non-regulated
individuals.
Full
carry: When the difference between futures
contract month prices equals the full cost of carrying
(storing) the commodity from one delivery period to
the next. Carrying charges include insurance, interest,
and storage.
Fundamental
analysis: The study of specific factors,
such as weather, wars, discoveries, and changes in government
policy, which influence supply and demand and, consequently,
prices in the market place.
Futures
Commission Merchant (FCM): An individual
or organization accepting orders to buy or sell futures
contracts or futures options, and accepting payment
for his services. FCMs must be registered with the CFTC
and the NFA, and maintain a minimum capitalization of
$300,000.
Futures
contract: A standardized and binding agreement
to buy or sell a predetermined quantity and quality
of a specified commodity at a future date. Standardization
of the contracts enhances their transferability. Futures
contracts can be traded only by auction on exchanges
registered with the CFTC.
Futures
Industry Association (FIA): The futures
industry's national trade association. They lobbied
in favor of establishing a second layer of bureaucracy
for the futures industry (NFA).
Gambler:
One who seeks profit by taking noncalculated or man-made
risks. If one flips a coin to determine his course of
action, he is gambling as to the outcome. If one bets
on the horses, the outcome of a sports event, or some
other man-made event, he is gambling. A gambler is distinguished
from a speculator in that a speculator could profit
from price change if he knew enough about the supply
and demand factors used to determine price. He also
trades economic goods, thus benefitting mankind.
Gap:
A term used by technicians to describe a jump or drop
in prices; i.e., prices skipped a trading range. Gaps
are usually filled at a later date.
Geometric
index: An index in which a 1% change in
the price of any two stocks comprising the index impacts
on it equally. The Value Line Average index is composed
of 1,700 stocks and is a geometric index.
Give-up:
A customer "give-up" is a trade executed by one broker
for the client of another broker and then "given-up"
to the regular broker; e.g., a floor broker with discretion
must have another broker execute the trade.
Good
till Cancelled (GTC): A qualifier for any
kind of order extending its life indefinitely; i.e.,
until filled or canceled.
Grantor:
Someone who assumes the obligation, not the right, to
buy (for a put) or sell (for a call) the underlying
futures contract or commodity at the strike price. See
also Writer.
Guarantee
fund: One of two funds established for
the protection of customers' monies; the clearing members
contribute a percentage of their gross revenues to the
guarantee fund. See also Surplus fund.
Guided
account: An account that has a planned
trading strategy and is directed by either a CTA or
a FCM. The customer is advised on specific trading positions,
which he must approve before an order may be entered.
These accounts often require a minimum initial investment,
and may use only a predetermined portion of the investment
at any particular time. Not to be confused with a discretionary
account.
Hedge
ratio: The relationship between the number
of contracts required for a direct hedge and the number
of contracts required to hedge in a specific situation.
The concept of hedging is to match the size of a positive
cash flow from a gaining futures position with the expected
negative cash flow created by unfavorable cash market
price movements. If the expected cash flow from a $1
million face-value T-Bill futures contract is one-half
as large as the expected cash market loss on a $1 million
face-value instrument being hedged (for whatever reason),
then two futures contracts are needed to hedge each
$1 million of face value. The hedge ratio is 2:1.
Hedge ratios are used frequently when hedging with futures
options, interest rate futures, and stock index futures,
to aid in matching expected cash flows. Generally, the
hedge ratio between the number of futures options required
and the number of futures contracts is 1: 1. For interest
rate and stock index futures, the ratios may vary depending
on the correlation between price movement of the assets
being hedged and the futures contracts or options used
to hedge them. Most agricultural hedge ratios are 1:
1.
Hedger:
One who hedges; one who attempts to transfer the risk
of price change by taking an opposite and equal position
in the futures or futures option market from that position
held in the cash market.
Hedging:
Transferring the risk of loss due to adverse price movement
through the purchase or sale of contracts in the futures
markets. The position in the futures market is a substitute
for the future purchase or sale of the physical commodity
in the cash market. If the commodity will be bought,
the futures contract is purchased (long hedge); if the
commodity will be sold, the futures contract is sold
(short hedge).
High:
The top price paid for a commodity or its option in
a given time period, usually a day or the life of a
contract.
Inelasticity:
A statistic attempting to quantify the change in supply
or demand for a good, given a certain price change.
The more inelastic demand (characteristic of necessities),
the less effect a change in price has on demand for
the good. The more inelastic supply, the less supply
changes when the price does.
Index:
A specialized average. Stock indexes may be calculated
by establishing a base against which the current value
of the stocks, commodities, bonds, etc., will change;
for example, the S&P 500 index uses the
market value of the 500 stocks as a base of 10.
Inflation:
The creation of money by monetary authorities. In more
popular usage, the creation of money that visibly raises
goods prices and lowers the purchasing power of money.
It may be creeping, trotting, or galloping, depending
on the rate of money creation by the authorities. It
may take the form of "simple inflation," in which case
the proceeds of the new money issues accrue to the government
for deficit spending; or it may appear as "credit expansion,"
in which case the authorities channel the newly created
money into the loan market. Both forms are inflation
in the broader sense.
Initial
margin: When a customer establishes a position,
he is required to make a minimum initial margin deposit
to assure the performance of his obligations. Futures
margin is earnest money or a performance bond.
Interest:
What is paid to a lender for the use of his money and
includes compensation to the lender for three factors:
1) Time value of money (lender's rate)—the value of
today's dollar is more than tomorrow's dollar. Tomorrow's
dollars are discounted to reflect the time a lender
must wait to "enjoy" the money, not to mention the uncertainties
tomorrow brings. 2) Credit risk—the risk of repayment
varies with the creditworthiness of the borrower. 3)
Inflation—as the purchasing power of a dollar declines,
more dollars must be repaid to maintain the same purchasing
power.
Interest
is one of the components of carrying charges; i.e.,
the cost of the money needed to finance the commodity's
purchase or storage. The market rate of interest can
also be used to establish an opportunity cost for the
funds that are tied up in any investment.
Interest
rate futures: Futures contracts traded
on long-term and short-term financial instruments: U.S.
Treasury bills and bonds and Eurodollar Time Deposits.
More recently, futures contracts have developed for
German, Italian, and Japanese government bonds, to name
a few.
Inter-market:
A spread in the same commodity, but on different markets.
An example of an inter-market spread would be buying
a wheat contract on the Chicago Board of Trade, and
simultaneously selling a wheat contract on the Kansas
City Board of Trade.
In-the-money:
A call is in-the-money when the underlying futures price
is greater than the strike price. A put is in-the-money
when the underlying futures price is less than the strike
price. In-the-money options have intrinsic value.
Intra-market:
A spread within a market. An example of an intra-market
spread is buying a corn contract in the nearby month
and selling a corn contract on the same exchange in
a distant month.
Intrinsic
value: The amount an option is in the-money,
calculated by taking the difference between the strike
price and the market price of the underlying futures
contract when the option is "in-the-money." A COMEX
350 gold futures call has an intrinsic value of $10
if the underlying gold futures contract is at $360/ounce.
Introducing
Broker (IB): An individual or firm who
can perform all the functions of a broker except one.
An IB is not permitted to accept money, securities,
or property from a customer. An IB must be registered
with the CFTC, and conduct its business through an FCM
on a fully disclosed basis.
Inverted
market: A futures market in which near-month
contracts are selling at prices that are higher than
those for deferred months. An inverted market is characteristic
of a short-term supply shortage. The notable exceptions
are interest rate futures, which are inverted when the
distant contracts are at a premium to near month contracts.
Kansas
City Board of Trade (KCBT): The first verifiable
futures exchange in the United States (1856) was incorporated
in 1973. Contracts on wheat and grain sorghum have been
traded there for many years. The KCBT was the first
exchange to introduce stock index futures (the Value
Line Average); they also have an option on that futures
contract. They are located at 4800 Main St., Suite 303,
Kansas City, MO 64112.
Last
trading day: The last day on which a futures
contract is traded.
Law
of demand: Demand exhibits a direct relationship
to price. If all other factors remain constant, an increase
in demand leads to an increased price, while a decrease
in demand leads to a decreased price.
Law
of supply: Supply exhibits an inverse relationship
to price. If all other factors hold constant, an increase
in supply causes a decreased price, while a decrease
in supply causes an increased price.
Letter
of acknowledgment: A form received with
a Disclosure Document intended for the customer's signature
upon reading and understanding the Disclosure Document.
The FCM is required to maintain all letters of acknowledgment
on file. It may also be known as a Third Party Account
Controllers form.
Leverage:
The control of a larger sum of money with a smaller
amount. By accepting the liability to purchase or deliver
the total value of a futures contract, a smaller sum
(margin) may be used as earnest money to guarantee performance.
If prices move favorably, a large return on the margin
can be earned from the leverage. Conversely, a loss
can also be large, relative to the margin, due to the
leverage.
Liability:
1) In the broad legal sense, responsibility or obligation.
For example, a person is liable to pay his debts, under
the law; 2) In accounting, any debt owed by an individual
or organization. Current, or short-term, liabilities
are those to be paid in less than one year (wages, taxes,
accounts payable, etc.). Long-term, or fixed, liabilities
are those that run for one year or more (mortgages,
bonds, etc.); 3) In futures, traders deposit margin
as earnest money, but they are liable for the entire
value of the contract; 4) In futures options, purchasers
of options have their liability limited to the premium
they pay; option writers are subject to the liability
associated with the underlying deliverable futures contract.
Limit:
See Price limit, Position limit, and Variable limit.
Limit
move: The increase or decrease of a price
by the maximum amount allowed for any one trading session.
Price limits are established by the exchanges, and approved
by the CFTC. They vary from contract to contract.
Limit
orders: A customer sets a limit on price
or time of execution of a trade, or both; for example,
a "buy limit" order is placed below the market price.
A "sell limit" order is placed above the market price.
A sell limit is executed only at the limit price or
higher (better), while the buy limit is executed at
the limit price or lower (better).
Limited
risk: A concept often used to describe
the option buyer's position. Because the option buyer's
loss can be no greater than the premium he pays for
the option, his risk of loss is limited.
Limited
risk spread: A bull spread in a market
where the price difference between the two contract
months covers the full carrying charges. The risk is
limited because the probability of the distant month
price moving to a premium greater than full carrying
charges is minimal.
Line-bar
chart: See Bar chart.
Liquidate:
Refers to closing anfutures position. For an
long, this would be selling the contract. For a short
position, it would be buying the contract back (short
covering, or covering his short).
Liquidity
(liquid market): A market which allows
quick and efficient entry or exit at a price close to
the last traded price. The ability to liquidate or establish
a position quickly is due to a large number of traders
willing to buy and sell.
Locals:
The floor traders who trade primarily for their own
accounts. Although "locals" are speculators, they provide
the liquidity needed by hedgers to transfer the risk
of price change.
Long:
One who has purchased futures contracts or the cash
commodity, but has not taken any action to offset his
position. Also, purchasing a futures contract. A trader
with a long position hopes to profit from a price increase.
Long
hedge: A hedger who is short the cash (needs
the cash commodity) buys a futures contract to hedge
his future needs. By buying a futures contract when
he is short the cash, he is entering a long hedge. A
long hedge is also known as a substitute purchase or
an anticipatory hedge.
Long-the-basis:
A person who owns the physical commodity and hedges
his position with a short futures position is said to
be long-the-basis. He profits from the basis becoming
more positive (stronger); for example, if a farmer sold
a January soybean futures contract at $6.00 with the
cash market at $5.80, the basis is -.20. If he repurchased
the January contract later at $5.50 when the cash price
was $5.40, the basis would then be -.10. The long-the-basis
hedger profited from the 10› increase in basis.
Low:
The smallest price paid during the day or over the life
of the contract.
Maintenance
margin: The minimum level at which the
equity in a futures account must be maintained. If the
equity in an account falls below this level, a margin
call will be issued, and funds must be added to bring
the account back to the initial margin level. The maintenance
margin level generally is 75% of the initial margin
requirement.
Managed
account: See . Discretionary account
Margin:
Margin in futures is a performance bond or "earnest
money." Margin money is deposited by both buyers and
sellers of futures contracts, as well as sellers of
futures options. See Initial margin.
Margin
call: A call from the clearinghouse to
a clearing member (variation margin call), or from a
broker to a customer (maintenance margin call), to add
funds to their margin account to cover an adverse price
movement. The added margin assures the brokerage firm
and the clearinghouse that the customer can purchase
or deliver the entire contract, if necessary.
Market
order: An order to buy or sell futures
or futures options contracts as soon as possible at
the best available price. Time is of primary importance.
Market-if-touched
order (MIT): They are similar to stop orders
in two ways: 1) They are activated when the price reaches
the order level; 2) They become market orders once they
are activated; however, MIT orders are used differently
from stop orders. A buy MIT order is placed below the
current market price, and establishes a long position
or closes a short position. A sell MIT order is placed
above the current market price, and establishes a short
position or closes a long position.
Market-share
weighted index: An index where the impact
of a stock price change depends upon the market-share
that stock controls. For example, a stock with a large
market share, such as IBM with over 600 million shares
outstanding, would have a greater impact on a market-share
weighted index than a stock with a small market-share,
such as Foster Wheeler, with approximately 34 million
shares outstanding.
Market-value
weighted index: A stock index in which
each stock is weighted by market value. A change in
the price of any stock will influence the index in proportion
to the stock's respective market value. The weighting
of each stock is determined by multiplying the number
of shares outstanding by the stock's market price per
share; therefore, a high-priced stock with a large number
of shares outstanding has more impact than a low-priced
stock with only a few shares outstanding. The S&P
500 is a value weighted index.
Mark-to-market:
The IRS's practice of calculating gains and losses onfutures positions as of the end of the tax year.
In other words, taxpayers'futures positions are
marked to the market price as of the end of the tax
year and taxes are assessed as if the gains or losses
had been realized.
Maturity:
The period during which a futures contract can be settled
by delivery of the actuals; i.e., the period between
the first notice day and the last trading day. Also,
the due date for financial instruments.
Maximum
price fluctuation: See Limit move.
MidAmerica
Commodity Exchange (MACE): Founded in 1868,
it was incorporated as the ChicagoBoard of Trade
in 1880, and changed its name to MidAmerica Commodity
Exchange in 1972. The MidAm is known for its mini-contracts.
It has contracts with a smaller commodity quantity deliverable
in grains, currencies, metals, interest rate futures,
and the meats. It also has options for many of its futures
contracts. The MidAm was recently purchased by the Chicago
Board of Trade and is located at 141 W. Jackson Blvd.,
Chicago, IL 60604.
Minimum
price fluctuation: The smallest allowable
fluctuation in a futures price or futures option premium.
Minneapolis
Grain Exchange (MGE): The largest organized
cash grain market in the world, founded in 1881, has
futures contracts in wheat, high fructose corn syrup,
and oats, as well as options on their wheat futures
contract. The MGE is located at 400 S. 4th St., Minneapolis,
MN 55415.
Monthly
statement: An account record for each month
of activity in a futures and/or futures options account.
Quarterly statements are required for inactive accounts.
Moving
average: An average of prices for a specified
number of days. If it is a three (3) day moving average,
for example, the first three days' prices are averaged
(1,2,3), followed by the next three days' average price
(2,3,4), and so on. Moving averages are used by technicians
to spot changes in trends.
Naked:
When an option writer writes a call or put without owning
the underlying asset.
National
Futures Association (NFA): A "registered
futures association" authorized by the CFTC in 1982
that requires membership for FCMs, their agents and
associates, CTAs, and CPOs. This is a self-regulatory
group for the futures industry similar to the National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. in the securities
industry.
Nearby:
The futures contract month with the earliest delivery
period.
Net
position: The difference between totallong andshort positions in any one or all
combined futures contract months held by an individual.
Neutral
calendar spread: See Calendar spread.
New
York Cotton Exchange (NYCE): Founded in
1870, the state charter restricts trading to cotton,
thus associate memberships have been established to
trade other items such as orange juice, the U.S. dollar
index, 5 year T-Notes, and options on the futures contracts.
They are located at 4 World Trade Center, New York,
NY 10048. See also New York Futures Exchange.
New
York Futures Exchange (NYFE): Began as
a subsidiary of the New York Stock Exchange. Today,
the NYFE is a division of the New York Cotton Exchange
and trades stock index futures contracts based on the
New York Stock Exchange Composite (NYSEC) Index, and
the Kravitz Roberts Commodity Research Bureau (KR-CRB)
Index. They also have an option on the NYSEC index and
the KR-CRB index. The NYFE is located at 4 World Trade
Center, New York, NY 10048.
New
York Mercantile Exchange (NYME): Founded
in 1872 to trade cheese, butter, and eggs, it changed
its emphasis to cover futures contracts for platinum,
palladium, and energy (crude oil, gasoline, etc.), as
well as options on most of their contracts. They are
located at 4 World Trade Center, NewYork, NY 10048.
Nominal
price (or nominal quotation): The price
quotation calculated for futures or options for a period
during which no actual trading occurred. These quotations
are usually calculated by averaging the bid and asked
prices.
Normal
market: The deferred months' prices for
futures contracts are normally higher than the nearby
months' to reflect the costs of carrying a contract
from now until the distant delivery date. Thus, a "normal
market," for non-interest rate futures contracts, exists
when the distant months are at a premium to the nearby
months. For interest rate futures, just the opposite
is true. The yield curve dictates that a "normal market"
for interest rate futures occurs when the nearby months
are at a premium to the distant months.
Notice
of intention to deliver: During the delivery
month for a futures contract, the seller initiates the
delivery process by submitting a "notice of intention
to deliver" to the clearinghouse, which, in turn, notifies
the oldest outstanding long of the seller's intentions.
If the long does not offset his position, he will be
called upon to accept delivery of the goods.
Offer:
To show the desire to sell a futures contract at an
established price.
Offset:
See Offsetting.
Offsetting:
Eliminating the obligation to make or take delivery
of a commodity by liquidating a purchase or covering
a sale of futures. This is affected by taking an equal
and opposite position: either a sale to offset a previous
purchase, or a purchase to offset a previous sale in
the same commodity, with the same delivery date. If
an investor bought an August gold contract on the COMEX,
he would offset this obligation by selling an August
gold contract on the COMEX. To offset an option, the
same option must be bought or sold; i.e., a call or
a put with the same strike price and expiration month.
Offsetting
positions: 1) Taking an equal and opposite
futures position to a position held in the cash market.
The offsetting futures position constitutes a hedge;
2) Taking an equal and opposite futures position to
another futures position, known as a spread or straddle;
3) Buying a futures contract previously sold, or selling
a futures contract previously bought, to eliminate the
obligation to make or take delivery of a commodity.
When trading futures options, an identical option must
be bought or sold to offset a position.
Omnibus
account: An account carried by one Futures
Commission Merchant (FCM) with another. The transactions
of two or more individual accounts are combined in this
type of account. The identities of the individual account
holders are not disclosed to the holding FCM. A brokerage
firm may have an omnibus account including all its customers
with its clearing firm.
One
Cancels Other (OCO): A qualifier used when
multiple orders are entered and the execution of one
order cancels a second or alternate order.
1) The first price of the day for a contract on a securities
or futures exchange. Futures exchanges postng
ranges for daily trading. Due to the fast-moving operation
of futures markets, this range of closely related prices
allows market participants to fill contracts at any
price within the range, rather than be restricted to
one price. The daily prices that are published are approximate
medians of theng range; 2) When markets are in
session, or contracts are being traded, the markets
are said to be ""
interest: For futures, the total number
of contracts not yet liquidated by offset or delivery;
i.e., the number of contracts outstanding.interest
is determined by counting the number of transactions
on the market (either the total contracts bought or
sold, but not both). For futures options, the number
of calls or puts outstanding; each type of option has
its owninterest figure.
outcry: Oral bids and offers made in the
trading rings, or pits. "outcry" is required for
trading futures and futures options contracts to assure
arms-length transactions. This method also assures the
buyer and seller that the best available price is obtained.
trade equity: The gain or loss on
positions that has not been realized.
ng
range: Uponng of the market, the
range of prices at which transactions occurred. All
orders to buy and sell on theng are filled within
theng range.
Opportunity
cost: The price paid for not investing
in a different investment. It is the income lost from
missed opportunities. Had the money not been invested
in land, earning 5%, it could have been invested in
T-Bills, earning 10%. The 5% difference is an opportunity
cost.
Option
seller: See Grantor and Writer.
Option
contract: A unilateral contract giving
the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy
or sell a commodity, or a futures contract, at a specified
price within a certain time period. It is unilateral
because only one party (the buyer) has the right to
demand performance on the contract. If the buyer exercises
his right, the seller (writer or grantor) must fulfill
his obligation at the strike price, regardless of the
current market price of the asset.
Order:
1) In business and trade, making a request to deliver,
sell, receive, or purchase goods or services; 2) In
the securities and futures trade, instructions to a
broker on how to buy or sell. The most common orders
in futures markets are market orders and limit orders
(which see).
Original
margin: See Initial
margin.
Out-of-the-money:
A call is out-of- the-money when the strike price is
above the underlying futures price. A put is out-of-the-money
when the strike price is below the underlying futures
price.
Overbought:
A technician's term to describe a market in which the
price has risen relatively quickly—too quickly to be
justified by the underlying fundamental factors.
Oversold:
A technical description for a market in which prices
have dropped faster than the underlying fundamental
factors would suggest.
Pit:
The area on the trading floor of an exchange where futures
trading takes place. The area is described as a "pit"
because it is octagonal with steps descending into the
center. Traders stand on the various steps, which designate
the contract month they are trading. When viewed from
above, the trading area looks like a pit.
Pit
broker: A person on the exchange floor
who trades futures contracts for others in the pits.
See also Floor broker.
Pit
trader: See Floor trader.
Point:
See Minimum price fluctuation.
Point
and figure chart: A graphic representation
of price movement using vertical rows of "x"s to indicate
significant up ticks and "o"s to reflect down ticks.
Such charts do not reveal minute price fluctuations,
only trends once they have established themselves.
Point
balance: Prepared by an FCM, a point balance
is a statement indicating profit or loss on all
contracts by computing them to an official closing or
settlement price.
Pool:
See Commodity pool.
Portfolio:
The group of investments held by an investor.
Position:contracts indicating an interest in the market,
be it short or long.
Position
limit: The maximum number of futures contracts
permitted to be held by speculators or spreaders. The
CFTC establishes some position limits, while the exchanges
establish others. Hedgers are exempt from position limits.
Position
trader: A trader who establishes a position
(either by purchasing or selling) and holds it for an
extended period of time.
Power
of attorney: An agreement establishing
an agent-principal relationship. The "power of attorney"
grants the agent authority to act on the principal's
behalf under certain designated circumstances. In the
futures industry, a power of attorney must be in writing
and is valid until revoked or terminated.
Premium:
The price paid by a buyer to purchase an option. Premiums
are determined by "outcry" in the pits.
Price:
A fixed value of something. Prices are usually expressed
in monetary terms. In a free market, prices are set
as a result of the interaction of supply and demand
in a market; when demand for a product increases and
supply remains constant, the price tends to decline.
Conversely, when the supply increases and demand remains
constant, the price tends to decline; if supply decreases
and demand remains constant, prices tend to rise. Today's
markets are not purely competitive; prices are affected
by government controls and supports that create artificial
supplies and demand, and inhibit free trade, thus making
price predictions more difficult for those not privileged
with inside government information.
Price
discovery mechanism: The method by which
the price for a particular shipment of a commodity is
determined. Factors taken into account include quality,
delivery point, and the size of the shipment. For example,
if the price of corn is $3.50 per bushel on the CBOT,
the local price of corn per bushel can be discovered
by taking into consideration the distance from Chicago
that corn would have to be shipped, the difference in
quality between local and Chicago corn, and the amount
of corn to be transported. Once these factors are considered,
both the buyer and seller can arrive at a reasonable
price for their area.
Price
limit: The maximum price rise or decline
permitted by an exchange in its commodities. The limit
varies from commodity to commodity and may change depending
on price volatility (variable price limits). Not all
exchanges have limits; those that do set their limits
relative to the prior day's settlement, for example,
the CBOT may set its limit at 10› for corn. On day 2,
corn may trade up or down 10› from the previous day's
close of $3.00 per bushel; i.e., up to $3.10 or down
to $2.90 per bushel.
Price
weighted index: A stock index weighted
by adding the price of 1 share of each stock included
in the index, and dividing this sum by a constant divisor.
The divisor is changed when a stock split or stock dividend
occurs because these affect the stock prices. The MMI
is a price weighted index.
Primary
markets: The principal market for the purchase
and sale of physical commodities.
Purchase
and sale statement: A form required to
be sent to a customer when a position is closed; it
must describe the trade, show profit or loss and the
commission.
Purchaser:
Anyone who enters the market as a buyer of a good, service,
futures contract, call, or put.
Pure
hedging: A technique used by a hedger who
holds his futures or option position without exiting
and re-entering the position until the cash commodity
is sold. Pure hedging also is known as conservative
or true hedging, and is used largely by inexperienced
traders wary of price fluctuation, but interested in
achieving a target price.
Put:
An option contract giving the buyer the right to sell
something at a specified price within a certain period
of time. A put is purchased in expectation of lower
prices. If prices are expected to rise, a put may be
sold. The seller receives the premium as compensation
for accepting the obligation to accept delivery, if
the put buyer exercises his right to sell. See also
Limited risk.
Pyramiding:
Purchasing additional contracts with the profits earned
onpositions.
Quotation:
Often referred to as a "quote." The actual, bid, or
asked price of futures, options, or cash commodities
at a certain time.
Rally:
An upward price movement. See Recovery.
Range:
The difference between the highest and lowest prices
recorded during a specified time period, usually one
trading session, for a given futures contract or commodity
option.
Ratio
writing: When an investor writes more than
one option to hedge an underlying futures contract.
These options usually are written for different delivery
months. Ratio writing expands the profit potential of
the investor's option position. Example: an investor
would be ratio writing if he is long one August gold
contract and he sells (writes) two gold calls, one for
February delivery, the other for August.
Recovery:
Rising prices following a decline.
Registered
Commodity Representative (RCR): A person
registered with the exchange(s) and the CFTC who is
responsible for soliciting business, "knowing" his/her
customers, collecting margins, submitting orders, and
recommending and executing trades for customers. A registered
commodity representative is sometimes called a "broker"
or "account executive.
Regulations
(CFTC): The guidelines, rules, and regulations
adopted and enforced by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (the CFTC is a federal regulatory agency
established in 1974) in administration of the Commodity
Exchange Act.
Reparations:
Parties that are wronged during a futures or options
transaction may be awarded compensation through the
CFTC's claims procedure. This compensation is known
as reparations because it "repairs" the wronged party.
Reportable
positions: Positions where the reporting
level has been exceeded. See also Reporting level.
Reporting
level: An arbitrary number of contracts
held by a trader that must be reported to the CFTC and
the exchange. Reporting levels apply to all traders;
hedgers, speculators, and spreaders alike. Once a trader
has enough contracts to exceed the reporting level,
he has a "special account," and must report any changes
in his positions.
Resistance:
A horizontal price range where price hovers due to selling
pressure before attempting a downward move.
Retender:
The right of a futures contract holder, who has received
a notice of intention to deliver from the clearinghouse,
to offer the notice for sale on themarket, thus
offsetting his obligation to take delivery under the
contract. This opportunity is only available for some
commodities and only within a certain period of time.
Ring:
A designated area on the exchange floor where traders
and brokers stand while executing trades. Instead of
rings, some exchanges use pits.
Risk
disclosure document: A document outlining
the risks involved in futures trading. The document
includes statements to the effect that: you may lose
your entire investment; you may find it impossible to
liquidate a position under certain market conditions;
spread positions may not be less risky than simple "long"
or "short" positions; the use of leverage can lead to
large losses as well as large profits; stop-loss orders
may not limit your losses; managed commodity accounts
are subject to substantial management and advisory charges.
There is a separate risk disclosure document for options
which warns of the risks of loss in options trading.
This statement includes a description of commodity options,
margin requirements, commissions, profit potential,
definitions of various terms, and a statement of the
elements of the purchase price.
Rolling
hedge: Changing a futures hedge from one
contract month to another. Rolling a short hedge may
be advisable when more time is needed to complete the
cash transaction to avoid delivery on the futures contract.
Hedge rolling may also be considered to keep the hedge
in the less active, more distant months, thus reducing
the likelihood of swift price movements and the resulting
margin calls.
Round
turn: A complete futures transaction (both
entry and exit); for example, a sale and covering purchase,
or a purchase and liquidating sale. Commissions are
usually charged on a "round-turn" basis.
Scalper:
A floor trader who buys and sells quickly to take advantage
of small price fluctuations. Usually a scalper is ready
to buy at the bid and sell at the asked price, providing
liquidity to the market. The term "scalper" is used
because these traders attempt to "scalp" a small amount
on a trade.
Security
deposit: See Margin.
Segregated
account: An account separate from brokerage
firm accounts. Segregated accounts hold customer funds
so that if a brokerage house becomes insolvent, the
customers' funds will be readily recognizable and will
not be tied up in litigation for extended periods of
time.
Selective
hedging: The technique of hedging where
the futures or option position may be lifted and re-entered
numerous times before the cash market transaction takes
place. A hedge "locks-in" a target price to minimize
risk. Lifting the hedge lifts the risk protection (increasing
the possibility of loss), but also allows the potential
for gain.
Sell
stop order: See Stop
orders.
Selling
hedge: See Short hedge.
Settlement:
The clearinghouse practice of adjusting all futures
accounts daily according to gain or loss from price
movement is generally called settlement.
Settlement
price: Established by the clearinghouse
from the closing range of prices (the last 30 seconds
of the day). The settlement price is used to determine
the next day's allowable trading range, and to settle
all accounts between clearing members for each contract
month. Margin calls and invoice prices for deliveries
are determined from the settlement prices. In addition
to this, settlement prices are used to determine account
values and determine margins forpositions.
Short:
Someone who has sold actuals or futures contracts, and
has not yet offset the sale; the act of selling the
actuals or futures contracts, absent any offset.
Short
covering: Buying by shorts to liquidate
existing positions.
Short
hedge: When a hedger has a long cash position
(is holding an inventory or growing a crop) he enters
a short hedge by selling a futures contract. A sell
or short hedge is also known as a substitute sale.
Short-the-basis:
When a person or firm needs to buy a commodity in the
future, he can protect himself against price increases
by making a substitute purchase in the futures market.
The risk this person now faces is the risk of a change
in basis (cash price - futures price). This hedger is
said to be short-the-basis because he will profit if
the basis becomes more negative (weaker); for example,
if a hedger buys a corn futures contract at 325› when
cash corn is 312›, the basis is -.13. If this hedge
is lifted with futures at 320› and cash at 300›, the
basis is -.20, and the hedger has profited by the $.07
decrease in basis.
Sideways:
A market with a narrow price range; i.e., little upward
or downward price movement.
Special
account: An account which has a reportable
position in either futures or futures options. See
also Reporting level.
Speculation:
An attempt to profit from commodity price changes through
the purchase and/or sale of commodity futures. In the
process, the speculator assumes the risk that the hedger
is transferring, and provides liquidity in the market.
Speculator:
One who buys and sells stocks, land, etc., risking his
capital with the goal of earning a profit from price
changes. In contrast to gamblers, speculators understand
and evaluate existing market risks on the basis of data
and experience, while gamblers are those who seek out
man-made risks or "invest" in a roll of the dice.
Spot:
The market in which commodities are available for immediate
delivery. It also refers to the cash market price of
a specific commodity.
Spread:
l) Positions held in two different futures contracts,
taken to profit from the change in the difference between
the two contracts' prices; e.g., long a January Soybean
contract and short a March Soybean contract would be
a bull spread, used to profit from a narrowing in the
difference between the two prices; 2) The difference
between the prices of two futures contracts. If January
beans are $6.15 and March beans are $6.28, the spread
is -.13 or 13› under ($ = -.13).
Spreading:
The purchase of one futures contract and the sale of
another in an attempt to profit from the change in price
differences between the two contracts. Inter-market,
intercommodity, inter- delivery, and commodity product
are examples of spreads.
Stock
index futures: Based on stock market indexes,
including Standard and Poor's 500, Value Line, NYSE
Composite, Nikkei 225, the Major Market Index, and the
Over-the-Counter Index, these instruments are used by
investors concerned with price changes in a large number
of stocks, or with major long-term trends in the stock
market indexes. Stock index futures are settled in cash
and are generally quoted in ticks of .05. To determine
the contract value, the quote is generally multiplied
by $500.
Stop
orders: An order which becomes a market
order once a certain price level is reached. These orders
are often placed with the purpose of limiting losses.
They also are used to initiate positions. Buy stop orders
are placed at a price above the current market price.
Sell stop orders are placed below the market price;
for example, if the market price for December corn is
320›, a buy stop order could be placed at 320› or higher,
and a sell stop could be placed at 319_› or lower. A
buy stop order is activated by a bid or trade at or
above the stop price. A sell stop is triggered by a
trade or offer at or below the stop price.
Stopped
out: When a stop order is activated and
a position is offset, the trader has been "stopped out."
Storage:
The cost to store commodities from one delivery month
to another. Storage is one of the "carrying charges"
associated with futures.
Straddle:
For futures, the same as spreading. In futures options,
a straddle is formed by going long a call and a put
of the same strike price (long straddle), or going short
a call and a put of the same strike price (short straddle)
.
Strangle
spread: Makes maximum use of the premium's
time value decay. To utilize a strangle most profitably,
choose a market that is trading within a given range
(volatility peaking), and sell an out-of-the-money call
and an out-of-the-money put.
Strike
price: The specified price at which an
option contract may be exercised. If the buyer of the
option exercises (demands performance), the futures
contract positions will be entered at the strike price.
Strong
basis: A relatively small difference between
cash prices and futures prices. A strong basis also
can be called a "narrow basis," or a "more positive
basis": for example, a strong basis usually occurs in
grains in the spring before harvest when supplies are
low. Buyers must raise their bids to buy. As the cash
prices rise, relative to futures prices, the basis strengthens.
A strong basis indicates a good selling market, but
a poor buying market.
Summary
suspension: Occurs when a member fails
to pay NFA levied fines after seven days written notice.
One may also be summarily suspended from membership
(and trading) when the President and the NFA Board of
Directors or Executive Committee have reason to believe
that summary suspension is necessary (an emergency)
to protect the futures industry, customers, NFA members,
etc. Notice of such action is given to the CFTC. NFA
members are prohibited from conducting futures-related
business while under suspension or with a suspended
firm.
Supply:
The quantity of a good available to meet demand. Supply
consists of inventories from previous production, current
production, and expected future production. Because
resources are scarce, supply creates demand. Only price
must be determined.
Support:
A horizontal price range where price hovers due to buying
pressure before attempting a downward move.
Surplus
fund: A fund established by an exchange
for the protection of customers' monies; a portion of
all clearing fees are set aside for this fund.
Swap:
A contract to buy and sell currencies with spot (cash
and carry) or forward contracts. The contract provides
for the buying and selling to occur at different times;
thus, each party acquires a currency it needs for a
predetermined period of time at a predetermined price,
and locks in a sales price for the currency as well.
Symbols:
Letters used to designate which futures or options price
and which contract month is desired. Symbols are used
to access quotes from various quote systems.
Synthetic
position: A hedging strategy combining
futures and futures options for price protection and
increased profit potential; for example, by buying a
put option and selling (writing) a call option, a trader
can construct a position that is similar to a short
futures position. This position is known as a synthetic
short futures position, and shows a profit if the futures
prices decline, and receives margin calls if prices
rise. Synthetic positions are a form of arbitrage.
Systematic
risk: The risk affecting a market in general;
for example, if the government's monetary and fiscal
policies create inflation, price levels rise, affecting
the entire market in much the same way, thus creating
a systematic risk. Stock index futures can be used to
substantially reduce systematic risk. Compare with unsystematic
risk.
Technical
analysis: Technical analysis uses charts
to examine changes in price patterns, volume of trading,interest, and rates of change to predict and profit
from trends. Someone who follows technical rules (called
a technician) believes that prices will anticipate changes
in fundamentals.
Technician:
One who uses technical analysis to forecast price movements.
Terms:
The components, elements, or parts of an agreement.
The "terms" of a futures contract include: which commodity,
its quality, the quantity, the time and place of delivery,
and its price. All the terms of futures and futures
option contracts are standardized by the exchange, except
for price, which is determined through "outcry"
in the exchanges' trading pits.
Tick:
The minimum allowable price fluctuation (up or down)
for a futures contract. Different contracts have different
size ticks. Ticks can be stated in terms of price per
unit of measure, or in dollars and cents. See also
Point.
Time
value: The premium of an out-of-the money
option reflecting the probability that an option will
move into-the-money before expiration constitutes the
time value of the option. There also may be some time
value in the premium of an in-the-money option, which
reflects the probability of the option moving further
into the money. To determine the time value of an in-the-money
option, subtract the amount by which the option is in-the-money
(intrinsic value) from the total premium.
Trading
range: The prices between the high and
the low for a specific time period (day, week, life
of the contract).
Trend:
A significant price movement in one direction or another.
Trends may go either up or down.
Underlying
futures contract: The futures contract
covered by an option; for example, a 300 Dec. corn call's
underlying futures contract is the December corn futures
contract.
Unsystematic
risk: The risk of price change for an individual
stock, commodity, or industry. Anything from an oil
discovery to a change in management could affect this
sort of risk. Unsystematic risks are reduced or eliminated
through diversification of holdings, not by hedging
with index futures. Compare with systematic risk.
Uptrend:
A channel of upward price movement.
Value:
The importance placed on something by an individual.
Value is subjective and may change according to the
circumstances. Something that may be valued highly at
one time may be valued less at another time.
Variable
limits: Most exchanges set limits on the
maximum daily price movement of some of the futures
contracts traded on their floors. They also retain the
right to expand these limits if the price moves up-
or down-limit for one, two, or three trading days in
a row. If the limits automatically change after repeated
limit moves, they are known as variable limits.
Variation
margin call: A margin call from the clearinghouse
to a clearing member. These margin calls are issued
when the clearing member's margin has been reduced substantially
by unfavorable price moves. The variation margin call
must be met within one hour.
Vertical
spreads: Also known as a price spread,
is constructed with options having the same expiration
months. This can be done with either calls or puts.
See Bear call spread, Bull call spread, Bear put spread, and Bull put spread.
Volatile:
A market which often is subject to wide price fluctuations
is said to be volatile. This volatility is often due
to a lack of liquidity.
Volume:
The number of futures contracts, calls, or puts traded
in a day. Volume figures use the number of longs or
shorts in a day, not both. Such figures are reported
on the following day.
Wash
sales: An illegal process in which simultaneous
purchases and sales are made in the same commodity futures
contract, on the same exchange, and in the same month.
No actual position is taken, although it appears that
trades have been made. It is hoped that the apparent
activity will induce legitimate trades, thus increasing
trading volume and commissions.
Wasting
asset: A term often used to describe an
option because of its limited life. Shortly before its
expiration, an out-of-the-money option has only time
value, which declines rapidly. For an in-the-money option,
only intrinsic value is left upon expiration. For futures
options, this is either automatically exercised or cashed
out. At the end of its life, an option that has no intrinsic
value becomes worthless; i.e., it wastes away.
Weak
basis: A relatively large difference between
cash prices and futures prices. A weak basis also can
be called a "wide basis," or a "more negative basis":
for example, a weak basis usually occurs in grains at
harvest time when supplies are abundant. Buyers can
lower their bids to buy. As the cash prices decline,
relative to futures prices, the basis weakens (gets
wider). A weak basis indicates a poor selling market,
but a good buying market.
Writer:
One who sells an option. A "writer" (or grantor) obligates
himself to deliver the underlying futures position to
the option purchaser, should he decide to exercise his
right to the underlying futures contract position. Option
writers are subject to margin calls because they may
have to produce the long or short futures position.
A call writer must supply a long futures position upon
exercise, and thus receive a short futures position.
A put writer must supply a short futures position upon
exercise, and thus receive a long futures position.
Yield:
1) The production of a piece of land; e.g., his land
yielded 100 bushels per acre. 2) The return provided
by an investment; for example, if the return on an investment
is 10%, the investment yields 10%.
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