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ECON 339X: Agricultural Marketing

ECON 339X: Agricultural Marketing. Chad Hart Assistant Professor chart@iastate.edu 515-294-9911. John Lawrence Professor jdlaw@iastate.edu 515-294-7801. Going Short. Sold Nov. 2011 Soybeans @ $12.73, 1/11/11. Futures @ $13.36 63 cent shift. Cash quote for Oct. soybeans from Alleman

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ECON 339X: Agricultural Marketing

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  1. ECON 339X: Agricultural Marketing Chad Hart Assistant Professor chart@iastate.edu 515-294-9911 John Lawrence Professor jdlaw@iastate.edu 515-294-7801

  2. Going Short Sold Nov. 2011 Soybeans @ $12.73, 1/11/11 Futures @ $13.36 63 cent shift Cash quote for Oct. soybeans from Alleman 1/11/11 $11.92 1/19/11 $12.55 63 cent shift

  3. In my example: ($ per bushel) Nov. 2011 soybean futures 12.73 Historical basis for Nov. -0.25 Commission on trade -0.01 Expected local hedged price 12.47 Short Hedge Expected Price • Expected price = Futures prices when I place the hedge + Expected basis at delivery – Broker commission

  4. Short Hedge Margin Example

  5. Going Long Bought Dec. 2011 Corn @ $5.48, 1/11/11 Futures @ $5.68 20 cent shift Cash quote for Nov. corn from Alleman 1/11/11 $4.91 1/19/11 $5.10 19 cent shift

  6. In my example: ($ per bushel) Dec. 2011 corn futures 5.48 Historical basis for Dec. -0.25 Commission on trade +0.01 Expected local net price 5.24 Long Hedge Example • Expected price = Futures prices when I place the hedge + Expected basis at delivery + Broker commission

  7. Long Hedge Margin Example

  8. Speculators have no use for the physical commodity They buy or sell in an attempt to profit from price movements Add liquidity to the market May be part of the general public, professional traders or investment managers Short-term – “day traders” Long-term – buy or sell and hold Market Participants

  9. Corn Futures Trade Source: CFTC

  10. Soybean Futures Trade Source: CFTC

  11. Bullish Speculator No futures position “Long” futures position No futures position Time Now Later Maturity Buy futures contract Sell contract back “Open” a “long” futures position “Close” the “long” position “Make” a promise “Offset” the promise

  12. Going Long Bought Dec. 2011 Corn @ $5.48, 1/11/11

  13. Bearish Speculator No futures position “Short” futures position No futures position Time Now Later Maturity Sell futures contract Buy contract back “Open” a “short” futures position “Close” the “short” position “Make” a promise “Offset” the promise

  14. Going Short Sold Nov. 2011 Soybeans @ $12.73, 1/11/11

  15. Speculators: Buy or sell in an attempt to profit from favorable price movements Face the risk of losses from unfavorable price movements Do not produce or consume the commodity Benefit the market because they add liquidity Often trade the news of the day Speculators

  16. Relatively little capital required Initial margin, margin calls No need to handle commodity (e.g., transportation, storage, cleaning) Easy to speculate on either side of the market (Up or Down) Why Speculators Like Futures Markets

  17. Sudden death syndrome in soybeans returns to Iowa for the 2nd year in a row Reports of a bumper crop in Argentine corn China rumored to be in the market for corn Inflation is projected to rise How Would You Speculate?

  18. Looking for quick within-day price moves Might be “long” today and “short” tomorrow Limit the risk they face by limiting their amount of time in the market Day Traders

  19. Class web site: http://www.econ.iastate.edu/~chart/Classes/econ339/Spring2011/

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