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Education Center:
Introduction to Futures Trading 101 Reprinted with permission from National Futures Association. Copyright 2002. |
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| Chapter 9: Basic Trading
StrategiesEven if you should decide to participate in futures trading in
a way that doesnt involve having to make day-to-day trading decisions about what and
when to buy or sell (such as having a managed account or investing in a commodity pool),
it is nonetheless useful to understand the dollars and cents of how fu-tures trading gains
and losses are realized. If you intend to trade your own account, such an understanding is
essential.
Dozens of different strategies and variations of strategies are employed by futures traders in pursuit of speculative profits. Here are brief descriptions and illustrations of the most basic strategies. Buying (Going Long) to Profit from an Expected Price Increase Someone expecting the price of a particular commodity to increase over a given period of time can seek to profit by buying futures con-tracts. If correct in forecasting the direction and timing of the price change, the futures contract can be sold later for the higher price, thereby yielding a profit.1 If the price declines rather than increases, the trade will result in a loss. Because of leverage, losses as well as gains may be larger than the initial margin deposit. For example, assume its now January. The July crude oil futures price is presently quoted at $15 a barrel and over the coming month you expect the price to increase. You decide to deposit the required initial margin of $2,000 and buy one July crude oil fu-tures contract. Further assume that by April the July crude oil futures price has risen to $16 a barrel and you de-cide to take your profit by selling. Since each contract is for 1,000 bar-rels, your $1 a barrel profit would be $1,000 less transaction costs.
* For simplicity, examples do not take into account commissions and other transaction costs. These costs are important. You should be sure you under-stand them. Suppose, instead, that rather than ris-ing to $16 a barrel, the July crude oil price by April has declined to $14 and that, to avoid the possibility of further loss, you elect to sell the contract at that price. On the 1,000 barrel con-tract your loss would come to $1,000 plus transaction costs.
The only way going short to profit from an expected price decrease differs from going long to profit from an expected price increase is the sequence of the trades. Instead of first buying a futures contract, you first sell a futures contract. If, as you expect, the price does decline, a profit can be realized by later purchasing an offsetting futures contract at the lower price. The gain per unit will be the amount by which the purchase price is below the earlier selling price. Margin requirements for selling a futures contract are the same as for buying a futures contract, and daily profits or losses are credited or debited to the account in the same way. For example, suppose its August and between now and year end you ex-pect the overall level of stock prices to decline. The S&P 500 Stock Index is currently at 1200. You deposit an initial margin of $15,000 and sell one December S&P 500 futures contract at 1200. Each one point change in the index results in a $250 per contract profit or loss. A decline of 100 points by November would thus yield a profit, before transaction costs, of $25,000 in roughly three months time. A gain of this magnitude on less than a 10 percent change in the index level is an illustration of leverage working to your advantage.
A loss of this magnitude ($25,000, which is far in excess of your $15,000 initial margin deposit) on less than a 10 percent change in the index level is an illustration of leverage working to your disadvantage. Its the other edge of the sword. Spreads While most speculative futures transactions in-volve a simple purchase of futures contracts to profit from an expected price increaseor an equally simple sale to profit from an ex-pected price decreasenumerous other pos-sible strategies exist. Spreads are one example. A spread involves buying one futures contract in one month and selling another futures con-tract in a different month. The purpose is to profit from an expected change in the rela-tionship between the purchase price of one and the selling price of the other. As an illustration, assume its now November, that the March wheat futures price is presently $3.50 a bushel and the May wheat futures price is presently $3.55 a bushel, a difference of 5¢. Your analysis of market conditions indicates that, over the next few months, the price difference between the two contracts should widen to be-come greater than 5¢. To profit if you are right, you could sell the March futures contract (the lower priced con-tract) and buy the May futures contract (the higher priced contract).Assume time and events prove you right and that, by February, the March futures price has risen to $3.60 and the May futures price is $3.75, a difference of 15¢. By liquidating both contracts at this time, you can realize a net gain of 10¢ a bushel. Since each contract is 5,000 bushels, the net gain is $500.
Net gain 10¢ bushel Had the spread (i.e., the price difference) narrowed by 10¢ a bushel rather than wid-ened by 10¢ a bushel, the transactions just illustrated would have resulted in a loss of $500. Virtually unlimited numbers and types of spread possibilities exist, as do many other, even more complex futures trading strategies. These are beyond the scope of an introductory booklet and should be considered only by someone who clearly understands the risk/reward arithmetic involved. |
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DISCLAIMER: Futures Trading involves a huge risk of financial loss! FuturesKnowledge.com is a traders research and resource site - and is not meant to be used as a guide for trading. Due to the large risk involved - we highly recommend that you consult with a number of different resources before attempting to invest in the futures, commodities, options, or any other market we report on. Copyright © FuturesKnowledge, 2006. All rights reserved. |