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Title: Agribusiness Library


1
Agribusiness Library
Lesson 060061 The Futures Market part 1
2
Objectives
  • 1. Describe the futures market, and examine the
    advantages and disadvantages of futures trading.
  • 2. Identify the items specified on futures
    contracts, and determine the contract sizes of
    various commodities.

3
Terms
  • contract specifications
  • futures contract
  • futures market
  • stock markets

4
What are futures markets?
What are the advantages anddisadvantages of
futures trading?
  • A futures market is a centralized market where
    buyers and sellers trade contracts of
    commodities. They are legally binding agreements
    to buy or sell something in the future. Nearly
    all futures contracts do not actually result in
    delivery of the basic commodity. Traders discover
    the advantages of the futures market by selling
    the contract or buying it back.

5
What are futures markets?
What are the advantages anddisadvantages of
futures trading?
  • The ultimate goal of buying futures contracts is
    to purchase at a certain price and sell the
    contract later at a higher price. Futures
    contracts are sold on the floor of a futures
    exchange.

6
What are futures markets?
What are the advantages anddisadvantages of
futures trading?
  • A. A futures contract is difficult to understand
    because it is not in writing like a cash
    contract. A futures contract is a verbal
    agreement between the buyer and seller made on
    the floor of an exchange that specifies the time
    of delivery, place of delivery, time of payment,
    and quality of the item.

7
What are futures markets?
What are the advantages anddisadvantages of
futures trading?
  • B. Another marketthe stock marketis a
    centralized market. However, it is completely
    different from the futures and cash markets.
    Futures markets trade contracts on commodities
    and financial products.
  • Stock markets are markets that trade shares of
    ownership in publicly owned companies. When an
    individual buys stocks, he or she is buying
    shares of a company. When an individual buys
    futures, he or she is buying into a market that
    simply helps stabilize price as well as supply
    and demand fluctuations.

8
What are futures markets?
What are the advantages anddisadvantages of
futures trading?
  • C. The advantages and disadvantages of futures
    contracts are the following
  • 1. Advantages
  • a. They are easy to enter and exit.
  • b. They minimize risk.
  • c. They are often a better price than
    a forward
    contract.

9
What are futures markets?
What are the advantages anddisadvantages of
futures trading?
  • C. The advantages and disadvantages (contd)
  • 2. Disadvantages
  • a. There is no benefit from better prices.
  • b. There is a commission cost.
  • c. There are margin calls.
  • d. There are set quantities.

10
What items are specified on futures contracts?
What are thecontract sizes of various
commodities?
  • Items specified on futures contracts and contract
    sizes of commodities
  • A. The standard features that specify all the
    standard details of the contract are contract
    specifications. The specifications can be
    found in the local paper with the daily
    prices or by contacting the exchange where
    the commodity is traded.

11
What items are specified on futures contracts?
What are thecontract sizes of various
commodities?
  • 1. A futures contract contains specific
    information about the commodity and is a
    standardized agreement to buy or sell a
    commodity at a date in the future.

12
What items are specified on futures contracts?
What are thecontract sizes of various
commodities?
  • 2. Traditionally, a futures contract would
    specify
  • a. The types of commodity to be delivered (e.g.,
    corn, soybeans, wheat, or live cattle)
  • b. The quantity of the commodity (e.g., number
    of bushels of grain or pounds of livestock)
  • c. The quality of the commodity (e.g., specific
    U.S. grade)
  • d. The delivery point
  • e. The delivery date

13
What items are specified on futures contracts?
What are thecontract sizes of various
commodities?
  • 3. Todays contract specifications
  • a. For cattle and hogs the trade unit, point
    descriptions, contract listing, trading venue,
    product code, hours, listed, strike, limits,
    and minimum fluctuation
  • b. For grain and oilseed futures contract size,
    deliverable grades, price quote, tick size,
    contract months, last trading day, last
    delivery day, trading hours, ticker symbols,
    and daily price limit

14
What items are specified on futures contracts?
What are thecontract sizes of various
commodities?
  • 4. The only part of a futures contract that is
    not specified is price. The price varies and is
    determined on the floor during commodity
    exchanges by traders who buy and sell the
    contracts.

15
What items are specified on futures contracts?
What are thecontract sizes of various
commodities?
  • B. Contract sizes of various commodities
  • 1. Live cattle futures40,000 pounds equals one
    live cattle futures contract.
  • 2. Feeder cattle futures50,000 pounds equals
    one feeder cattle. futures contract
  • 3. Lean hog futures40,000 pounds equals one
    lean hog futures contract.

16
What items are specified on futures contracts?
What are thecontract sizes of various
commodities?
  • B. Contract sizes of various commodities (contd)
  • 4. Frozen pork bellies futures40,000 pounds of
    frozen pork bellies (cut and trimmed) equals
    one frozen pork belly futures contract.
  • 5. Corn futures5,000 bushels (full-sized) and
    1,000 bushels (mini-sized)
  • 6. Wheat futures5,000 bushels (full-sized) and
    1,000 bushels (mini-sized)
  • 7. Soybean futures5,000 (full-sized) and 1,000
    bushels (mini-sized)

17
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18
Review
  • How does the stock market differ from futures and
    cash markets?
  • Name some advantages and disadvantages of futures
    markets.
  • What do the futures contracts typically specify?

19
Agribusiness Library
Lesson 060061 The Futures Market part 2
20
Objectives
  • 3. Explain the process of buying and selling
    futures.
  • 4. Explain how to read commodity prices, and
    determine how futures market prices can change.

21
Terms
  • cash settlement
  • contract month
  • delivery point
  • demand
  • exchange clearinghouse
  • high
  • initial margin deposit
  • long
  • low
  • market price
  • net change
  • offset
  • open
  • open interest
  • settle
  • short
  • supply
  • volume

22
What occurs during the buying and selling of
futures?
  • People buy and sell to achieve a profit.
    Sometimes the sale is profitable sometimes it is
    not. The laws of supply and demand usually
    determine prices. A futures contract acts as an
    agreement between the buyer and seller it
    specifies the quantity and quality of a
    commodity. It is not the definite buying and
    selling of a physical commodity.

23
What occurs during the buying and selling of
futures?
  • A. The goal of buying and selling is to buy at a
    price and sell later at a higher price. For
    example, if someone buys a bushel of corn for
    2 one day, he or she hopes the price will get
    higher so the corn can be sold for more than 2
    at a later date. This does not always happen.
    Sometimes the price of the corn will decrease,
    causing the person to lose money when he or she
    sells it to someone else for less than 2.

24
What occurs during the buying and selling of
futures?
  • B. Being short or being long a particular
    contract
  • 1. The initial sell in the futures market is
    called a short. If a trader sells a futures
    contract, he or she is often referred to as
    being short that particular contract.

25
What occurs during the buying and selling of
futures?
  • 2. The initial buy or the physical ownership is
    called a long in the futures market. If a
    trader buys a futures contract, he or she is
    often referred to as being long that particular
    contract.
  • a. If someone buys or is said to be long and
    then later sells, he or she has offset (taken
    the opposite action) to get out of an initial
    futures or option contract. An individual would
    do this if he or she thought it would be
    possible to sell corn now for 2 and buy it back
    later for less than 2.

26
What occurs during the buying and selling of
futures?
  • 2. The initial buy or the physical ownership is
    called a long (contd)
  • b. In the futures market, it is difficult to
    understand that a person can sell a contract
    for something that he or she does not actually
    own. However, it is like entering an obligation
    or promise to do something in the future.

27
What occurs during the buying and selling of
futures?
  • C. The exchange clearinghouse is an institution
    that tracks the value of each traders position
    and makes certain there are sufficient funds
    available to cover the traders obligations.
    Traders make an initial margin deposit to ensure
    contract performance. This deposit occurs at
    the beginning of the trade. Traders margin
    money is secured and maintained in an account
    and is adjusted daily to show a gain or loss in
    contract value.

28
What occurs during the buying and selling of
futures?
  • D. The price of an item is usually determined by
    supply and demand.
  • 1. Supply is the quantity of a product or
    service that sellers are willing or able to
    provide to the market at a given price.
  • 2. Demand is the quantity of a product or
    service buyers are willing and able to purchase
    from the market at a given price.

29
What occurs during the buying and selling of
futures?
  • D. The price of an item (contd)
  • 3. Many different things affect supply and
    demand.
  • a. The supply of corn could be affected by the
    cost of production, weather throughout the
    world, prices of related products, and the
    number of sellers in the market.
  • b. The demand of corn could be affected by a
    change in income of consumers, the number of
    buyers, the prices of related items, and the
    time of year.

30
What occurs during the buying and selling of
futures?
  • E. When buying a futures contract, a person is
    promising to accept or deliver a physical
    product in the future. Many commodity markets do
    not have contracts for every month because of
    biological and technical conditions of the
    commodity.
  • 1. The contract month stated on the contract is
    the month in the future when the purchaser is
    accepting or delivering a product. One of two
    things must happen before the contract expires.

31
What occurs during the buying and selling of
futures?
  • 1. The contract month (contd)
  • a. The person can accept delivery of the item
    specified in the contract when the contract
    expires.
  • b. The person can sell an identical futures
    contract or offset the contract before it
    expires. (Only about 5 of the traded contracts
    are actually delivered.)

32
What occurs during the buying and selling of
futures?
  • 2. If a person is concerned about having 5,000
    bushels of corn dumped in his or her driveway,
    he or she should look at the delivery pointthe
    designated place where the commodity must be
    moved to satisfy the terms of the delivery. This
    location is stated on a delivery notice, stating
    where the delivery will be if it takes place.

33
What occurs during the buying and selling of
futures?
  • 3. Physical delivery is avoided all together by
    cash settlements. A cash settlement is the
    process of discharging or offsetting a futures
    contract that has expired. Calculating the
    difference between the final futures price and a
    final cash price offsets the futures obligation.
    Therefore, the buyer and seller agree to close
    their positions and trade in cash rather than
    physically exchanging a commodity.

34
How can commodity prices be
interpreted?
How do futures market prices change?
  • Futures market trading has limited price
    movements for most products, so there is usually
    not a large increase or decrease from day to day.
  • A. The futures market
  • 1. Volume is the number of total contracts
    traded.
  • 2. Open interest is a measure of contracts that
    have not been offset by a buy and then a sell
    (or vice versa).

35
How can commodity prices be
interpreted?
How do futures market prices change?
  • A. The futures market (contd)
  • 3. Profit or loss is calculated based on the
    difference in the sell and buy prices at the
    times when the contract was sold or bought. In
    the futures market, there must be a buy for
    every sell and a sell for every buy.
  • 4. Even though the contracts are simply a
    promise to deliver or accept, there is a
    physical commodity behind every contract.

36
How can commodity prices be
interpreted?
How do futures market prices change?
  • B. Futures prices can be found in many
    newspapers, on television business reports, and
    on the Internet. Some terms are essential in
    understanding the numbers listed.
  • 1. Open is the first price anyone paid for
    the specific futures on the given date.
  • 2. High is the highest price anyone paid
    during trading on the given date.
  • 3. Low is the lowest price anyone paid
    during trading on the given date.

37
How can commodity prices be
interpreted?
How do futures market prices change?
  • B. Futures prices (contd)
  • 4. Settle is the last price that anyone paid
    during trading on the given date.
  • 5. The net change is the difference between the
    last price anyone paid during trading on the
    given date and the previous trading day. It is
    important for an individual to monitor the
    daily prices so he or she can offset his or her
    position before the contract expires.
    Otherwise, the individual will have to deliver
    or accept delivery of the product.

38
How can commodity prices be
interpreted?
How do futures market prices change?
  • C. The price of commodities changes with an
    increase or decrease in supply and demand. How
    much is being produced and how much is being
    consumed are the greatest factors in determining
    commodity prices.

39
How can commodity prices be
interpreted?
How do futures market prices change?
  • 1. Supply (how much of something there is for
    sale) can be influenced in many ways. For
    instance, a corn supply could be affected by
  • a. Production costs
  • b. Price increases for equipment, fertilizer,
    gasoline, or any other input
  • c. The price of related goods
  • d. The number of sellers in the market
  • e. The future expectation of prices

40
How can commodity prices be
interpreted?
How do futures market prices change?
  • 2. Demand (how much of something people are
    willing to buy at a given price) is also
    influenced by many factors.
  • a. A change in personal income
  • b. The price of related goods

41
How can commodity prices be
interpreted?
How do futures market prices change?
  • 3. The relationship between supply and demand
    come together to create a price.
  • a. Supply increases if people are willing and
    able to supply more of a product or service at
    every price. For example, supply would increase
    if farmers were willing to produce 8,000 pounds
    of milk every day if the price was 2 per
    hundred or 20 per hundred. It would increase
    because no one is producing less even though
    the price is different. Demand increases if
    people are willing and able to buy more of a
    product or service at every price.

42
How can commodity prices be
interpreted?
How do futures market prices change?
  • 3. The relationship between supply and demand
    (contd)
  • b. Supply decreases if people are willing and
    able to supply less at every price. The supply
    would decrease if farmers produced 4,000 pounds
    of milk every day compared to 8,000regardless
    of the price. Demand decreases if people are
    willing and able to buy less at every price.

43
How can commodity prices be
interpreted?
How do futures market prices change?
  • 3. The relationship between supply and demand
    (contd)
  • b. For instance, if consumers all bought 10
    flats of flowers at 5 each or 15 each, the
    demand would increase because they are buying
    regardless of price. On the other hand, if
    people buy five flats of flowers each at
    different prices, the demand will decrease
    because fewer flowers are being bought overall.

44
How can commodity prices be
interpreted?
How do futures market prices change?
  • 3. The relationship between supply and demand
    (contd)
  • c. The market price is where supply and demand
    meet. It is, therefore, the products
    worthconsidering supply and demand factors.

45
Review
  • Describe being short or being long a particular
    contract.
  • Name some factors that affect supply and demand.
  • Why do traders make an initial margin deposit?
  • Name three place you can find futures prices.
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