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Chapter 15

Chapter 15. Commodities and Financial Futures. Commodities and Financial Futures. Learning Goals Describe the essential features of a futures contract and explain how the futures market operates.

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Chapter 15

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  1. Chapter 15 Commodities and Financial Futures

  2. Commodities and Financial Futures • Learning Goals • Describe the essential features of a futures contract and explain how the futures market operates. • Explain the role that hedgers and speculators play in the futures market, including how profits are made and lost. • Describe the commodities segment of the futures market and the basic characteristics of these investment vehicles.

  3. Commodities and Financial Futures • Learning Goals (cont’d) • Discuss the trading strategies investors can use with commodities, and explain how investment returns are measured. • Explain the difference between a physical commodity and a financial future, and discuss the growing role of financial futures in the market today. • Discuss the trading techniques that can be used with financial futures, and note how these securities can be used in conjunction with other investment vehicles.

  4. The Futures Market • Cash Market: a market where a product or commodity changes hands in exchange for a cash price paid when the transaction is completed • Futures Market: the organized market for the trading of futures contracts • Futures Contract: a commitment to deliver a certain amount of some specified item at some specified date in the future

  5. Table 15.1Futures Contract Dimensions

  6. Characteristics of Futures Contracts • Transaction will not be completed until some agreed-upon date in the future • Delivery date and quantity are all set when the financial future is created • Seller has legally binding obligation to make delivery on specified date • Buyer/holder has legally binding obligation to take delivery on specified date • Futures may be held until delivery date or traded on futures market • All trading is done on a margin basis

  7. Advantages of Using Futures Contracts • Potential for very high returns • Margin buying allows use of leverage • Leverage: the ability to obtain a given equity position at a reduced capital investment, thereby magnifying total return • Allows producers to hedge prices • Don’t have to sell crops at harvest time when prices are often low • Commodities can provide an inflation hedge

  8. Disadvantages of Using Futures Contracts • High risk of losing more than amount originally invested; no limit on exposure to loss • Involves considerable amount of speculation • Requires specialized investor skills and patience

  9. Options Right to buy Strike price specified in option contract Loss limited to price paid for option Futures Obligation to buy Delivery price set by supply and demand No limit on potential loss Options versus Futures Contracts

  10. Futures Exchanges • Chicago Board of Trade (CBT) began in 1848 • More than a dozen U.S. commodities exchanges • Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) is largest • Chicago Board of Trade and New York Mercantile also active • 95% of U.S. commodities trade on these three exchanges • Most U.S. exchanges use “open cry auction” • European exchanges are rapidly growing and using more electronic technology

  11. Players in the Futures Markets • Hedgers • Producers and processors • Protecting their interests in underlying commodity or financial instrument • Provide the actual products being sold • Speculators • Investors • Trying to earn profit on expected swings in prices of futures contracts • Provide liquidity

  12. Trading Mechanics • Contracts are easily traded on futures markets • Bought and sold through brokerage offices • Same types of orders are used as stocks • Market • Limit • Long position—buying a contract • Investor wants contract price to go up • Short position—selling a contract • Investor wants contract price to go down • Long and short positions can be liquidated by executing an offsetting transaction • About 1% of futures contracts are settled by delivery

  13. Margin Trading • All futures contracts are traded on margin • No borrowing is required • Initial margin deposit • Amount deposited with broker at time of commodity transaction to cover any loss in market value of futures contract due to price movements • Margin requirements range from 2% to 10% • Maintenance deposit • Minimum amount of deposit required at all times • Margin call occurs if value drops below allowed amount • Mark-to-the-market occurs daily

  14. Table 15.3Major Classes of Commodities

  15. Components of Commodity Contract • Type of product • Exchange where contract is traded • Size of contract (in bushels, pounds, tons) • Method of valuing contract (e.g., cents per pound, dollars per ton) • Delivery month • Open Interest: the number of contracts currently outstanding on a commodity or financial future

  16. Factors in Commodity Price Behavior • Weather and crop forecasts • Economic factors • Political factors • International pressures • Settle Price: the closing price (last price of the day) for commodities and financial futures

  17. Commodity Price Behavior • Prices change daily • Changes can be sizable • Because of leverage, small unit price changes can cause large total dollar changes in contract price • To protect investors, daily price change limits are set: • Daily price limit: restriction on the day-to-day change in price • Maximum daily price range: the amount a commodity price can change during the day; usually equal to twice the daily price limit

  18. Components of a Commodities Contract

  19. Return on Invested Capital • Commodities allow use of leverage for potentially high returns • Return to investors is based upon amount of money actually invested

  20. Trading Strategies with Commodities • Speculating • Capitalizing on wide swings that are characteristic of many commodities • Spreading • Used by producers and processors to protect a position in a product or commodity • Producer or grower attempts to hedge as high a price as possible • Processor or manufacturer attempts to hedge as low a price as possible • No limit to the amount of loss that can occur with a futures contract

  21. Financial Futures • Financial Futures: future contract in which the commodity is a financial asset, such as debt securities, foreign currencies or market baskets of common stocks • Often used by large institutional investors to hedge specific types of risk: • Offset interest rate risk on debt instruments • Minimize foreign currency rate risk on overseas business transactions • Minimize market risk on common stock investments

  22. Examples of Financial Futures:Foreign Currency • Examples of Currency Futures • British pound • Swiss franc • Canadian dollar • Japanese yen • Euro • Other currencies

  23. Examples of Financial Futures: Interest Rates • Examples of Interest Rate Futures • U.S. Treasury securities • Federal Funds • Interest rate swaps • Euromarket deposits • Foreign government bonds

  24. Examples of Financial Futures: Stock-Indexes • Examples of Stock-Index Futures • Dow Jones Industrial Average • S&P 500 Index • Nasdaq 100 Index • Russell 2000 Index

  25. Financial Futures Contract Specifications • Similar to commodities contracts • Control large sums of underlying financial instruments • Have varying delivery dates • Stock-index futures are settled in cash rather than underlying stocks of the specific stock index.

  26. Speculating in Financial Futures • Allows large quantities of financial instruments to be controlled through future contract • Leverage can provide high returns (or losses) • “Long” positions are used if investor speculates values will go up • “Short” positions are used if investor speculates values will go down

  27. Hedging with Financial Futures • Effective way of protecting stock or other securities holdings in a declining market • Stock-index futures used to hedge stock portfolios • Interest rate futures used to hedge bond portfolios • Foreign currency futures used to hedge significant exposure to foreign exchange rate risk

  28. Combining Futures and Options • Futures Options: options that give the holders the right to buy or sell a single standardized futures contract for a specified period of time at a specified strike price • A significant advantage that a futures option has over a futures contract is that the option limits the buyer’s loss exposure to the price of the option.

  29. Chapter 15 Review • Learning Goals • Describe the essential features of a futures contract and explain how the futures market operates. • Explain the role that hedgers and speculators play in the futures market, including how profits are made and lost. • Describe the commodities segment of the futures market and the basic characteristics of these investment vehicles.

  30. Chapter 15 Review (cont’d) • Learning Goals (cont’d) • Discuss the trading strategies investors can use with commodities, and explain how investment returns are measured. • Explain the difference between a physical commodity and a financial future, and discuss the growing role of financial futures in the market today. • Discuss the trading techniques that can be used with financial futures, and note how these securities can be used in conjunction with other investment vehicles.

  31. Chapter 15 Additional Chapter Art

  32. Figure 15.1

  33. Table 15.2 Margin Requirements for a Sample of Commodities and Financial Futures

  34. Figure 15.2 Quotations on Actively Traded Commodity Futures Contracts

  35. Figure 15.3 Quotations on Selected Actively Traded Financial Futures

  36. Table 15.4 Futures Options: Puts and Calls on Futures Contracts

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