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Chapter 21 Principles of the Futures Market

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Futures contracts are marked to market every day. Can create accounting problems. 39 ... tend to move out of the market a few days prior to first notice day. 46 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 21 Principles of the Futures Market


1
Chapter 21Principles of the Futures Market
2
  • As near as I can learn, and from the best
    information I have been able to obtain on the
    Chicago Board of Trade, at least 95 of the sales
    of that Board are of this fictitious character,
    where no property is actually owned, no property
    sold or delivered, r expected to be delivered but
    simply wagers or bets as to what that property
    may be worth at a designated time in the
    future.wheat and cotton have become as much
    gambling tools as chips on the farobank table.
  • - Senator William D. Washburn

3
Outline
  • Introduction
  • Futures contracts
  • Market mechanics
  • The clearing process
  • Principles of futures contract pricing
  • Foreign currency futures

4
Introduction
  • Futures contracts can lessen price risk for
  • Businesses
  • Financial institutions
  • Farmers

5
Introduction (contd)
  • The two major groups of futures market
    participants are
  • Hedgers
  • Speculators

6
Futures Contracts
  • What futures contracts are
  • Why we have futures contracts
  • How to fulfill the futures contract promise

7
What Futures Contracts Are
  • Futures contracts are promises
  • The futures seller promises to deliver a quantity
    of a standardized commodity to a designated
    delivery point during the delivery month
  • The futures buyer promises to pay a predetermined
    price for the goods upon delivery

8
What Futures Contracts Are (contd)
  • With futures contracts, a trade must occur if
    someone holds the contract until its delivery
    date
  • Most futures contracts are eliminated before the
    delivery month
  • The contract obligation can be satisfied by
    making an offsetting trade
  • Only 2 of futures contracts actually result in
    delivery

9
Why We Have Futures Contracts
  • If suppliers and future buyers of a commodity
    could not agree on the future price of the
    commodity today
  • There would be added price risk and
  • The price to the consumer would be significantly
    higher

10
Why We Have Futures Contracts (contd)
  • The basic function of the commodity futures
    market is to transfer risk from the hedger to the
    speculator
  • The speculator assumes the risk because of the
    opportunity for profit

11
How to Fulfill the Futures Contract Promise
  • The futures market would not work if people could
    back out of the trade without fulfilling their
    promise
  • Trades actually become sales to or by the
    clearing corporation of the exchange

12
How to Fulfill the Futures Contract Promise
(contd)
  • Each exchange has a clearing corporation
  • Ensures the integrity of the futures contract
  • Assumes the responsibility for those position
    when a member is in financial distress
  • Requires good faith deposits to help ensure the
    members financial capacity to meet the
    obligations

13
Market Mechanics
  • The marketplace
  • Creation of a contract
  • Market participants

14
The Marketplace
  • Commodity trades are made by open outcry of the
    floor traders
  • Traders shout their offers to buy or sell
  • Traders use hand signals to indicate their
    willingness to buy or sell and desired quantities
  • Traders are located in the pit

15
The Marketplace (contd)
  • The pit
  • Is either octagonal or polygonal
  • Contains a raised structure called the pulpit
  • Representatives of the exchanges market report
    department enter all price changes
  • Is surrounded by electronic wallboards reflecting
    price information

16
The Marketplace (contd)
  • Pit lingo
  • See through the pit is a day with little
    trading activity
  • An Acapulco trade is an unusually large trade
  • Traders who lose all their trading capital have
    busted out (gone to Tapioca City)
  • A fire drill is a sudden rush of trading
    activity without apparent reason
  • A big price move is a lights-out move

17
The Marketplace (contd)
  • The Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) is the worlds
    largest futures exchange
  • Has more than 3,600 members
  • Has 1,402 full members
  • Have the right to trade in any of the commodities
    at the exchange
  • Has associate members
  • Allowed to trade financial instrument futures and
    certain other designated markets

18
Creation of A Contract
  • Buyers and sellers fill out cards to record their
    trades
  • One side of the card is blue (buy trades)
  • One side of the card is read (sell trades)
  • Each commodity has a symbol
  • E.g., US means Treasury bonds

19
Creation of A Contract (contd)
  • Buyers and sellers fill out cards to record their
    trades (contd)
  • Each delivery month has a letter code
  • E.g., U means September
  • Letters identify time blocks at which the trade
    occurred
  • E.g., A is the first thirty minutes of trading

20
Creation of A Contract (contd)
  • Example of a trading card (see next slide)
  • Dan Hennebry buys
  • 5 September Treasury bond futures contracts
  • From trader ZZZ working for firm OOO
  • At a price of 77 31/32 of par
  • In the first thirty minutes of trading

21
Creation of A Contract (contd)
22
Market Participants
  • Hedgers
  • Speculators
  • Scalpers

23
Hedgers
  • A hedger is someone engaged in some type of
    business activity with an unacceptable level of
    price risk
  • E.g., a farmers welfare depends on the price of
    the crop at harvest
  • The farmer wants to transfer the price risk to a
    speculator using the futures market
  • The farmer cannot eliminate the risk of a poor
    crop through futures

24
Hedgers (contd)
  • Hedgers normally go short in agricultural futures
  • A short hedge
  • E.g., the farmer promises to deliver
  • Hedgers sometimes go long
  • A long hedge
  • E.g., a manufacturer of college class rings wants
    to lock in the price of gold

25
Speculators
  • Speculators
  • Have no economic activity requiring the use of
    futures contracts
  • Find attractive investment opportunities in the
    futures market
  • Hope to make a profit rather than protecting one

26
Speculators (contd)
  • Speculators normally go long
  • Speculating on price increases
  • It is possible for speculators to go short
  • Speculating on price declines

27
Speculators (contd)
  • Speculators are either day traders or position
    traders
  • Day traders close out all their positions before
    trading closes for the day
  • Position traders
  • Routinely maintain futures positions overnight
  • Sometimes keep a contract open for weeks

28
Scalpers
  • Scalpers
  • Are really speculators
  • Trade for their own account
  • Make a living by buying and selling contracts in
    the pit

29
Scalpers (contd)
  • Scalpers (contd)
  • May buy and sell the same contract many times
    during a single trading day
  • Contribute to the liquidity of the futures market
  • Are also called locals

30
The Clearing Process
  • Introduction
  • Matching trades
  • Accounting supervision
  • Intramarket settlement
  • Settlement prices
  • Delivery

31
Introduction
  • The clearing process performs the following
    functions
  • Matching trades
  • Supervising the accounting for performance bonds
  • Handling intramarket settlements
  • Establishing settlement prices
  • Providing for delivery

32
Matching Trades
  • All traders are responsible for ensuring that
    their card decks are entered into the clearing
    process
  • The clearing corporation
  • Receives the members trading cards
  • Edits and checks the information on the cards by
    computer
  • Returns cards with missing information to the
    clearing member for correction

33
Matching Trades (contd)
  • Unmatched trades are called outtrades
  • Result in an Unmatched Trade Notice being sent to
    each of the clearing corporation members
  • Regardless of the reason for the Notice, it is
    the traders individual responsibility to resolve
    the error
  • Outtrade clerks (employed by the exchange) assist
    in the process of reconciling trades

34
Matching Trades (contd)
  • Examples of outtrades
  • A price out means two traders wrote down
    different prices for a given trade
  • A house out means the trading card lists an
    incorrect member firm
  • A quantity out occurs when the number of
    contracts is in dispute

35
Matching Trades (contd)
  • Examples of outtrades (contd)
  • A strike out occurs when the striking price is
    in dispute
  • A time out occurs when the delivery month is in
    dispute
  • A side out occurs when both parties marked
    either buy or sell

36
Accounting Supervision
  • Performance bonds deposited by member firms
    remain with the clearing corporation until the
    member either
  • Closes out her position by making an offsetting
    trade or
  • Closes out her position by delivery of the
    commodity

37
Accounting Supervision (contd)
  • When successful delivery occurs
  • Good faith deposits are returned to both parties
  • Payment for the commodity is received from the
    buyer and remitted to the seller
  • The warehouse receipt for the goods is delivered
    to the buyer

38
Accounting Supervision (contd)
  • Futures contracts are marked to market every day
  • Can create accounting problems

39
Accounting Supervision (contd)
  • Open interest is a measure of how many futures
    contracts in a given commodity exist at a
    particular time
  • Increases by one every time two opening
    transactions are matched
  • Published by the clearinghouse in the financial
    pages on a daily basis

40
Intramarket Settlement
  • Commodity prices may move so much in a single day
    that good faith deposits for members are eroded
    before the day ends
  • May result in a market variation call
  • A call on members to deposit more funds into
    their accounts during the day

41
Settlement Prices
  • Settlement prices
  • Are analogous to the closing price on the stock
    exchanges
  • Are normally an average of the high and low
    prices during the last minute or so of trading
  • Are established by the clearing corporation

42
Settlement Prices (contd)
  • Many commodity futures prices are constrained by
    a daily price limit
  • The price of a contract is not allowed to move by
    more than a predetermined about each trading day
  • Commodities may be up the limit or down the limit
    when big price moves occur
  • Trading will stop for the day once a limit move
    has occurred

43
Delivery
  • A seller who wishes to deliver fills out a Notice
    of Intention to Deliver with the clearing
    corporation
  • Indicates the intention of delivering the
    commodity on the next business day
  • Delivery can occur any time during the delivery
    month

44
Delivery (contd)
  • First notice day is the first business day prior
    to the first day of the delivery month
  • Position day is the day prior to first notice day
  • Long position members must submit a Long Position
    Report
  • On intention day, the clearing corporation may
    assign delivery to the member with the oldest
    long position in the particular commodity

45
Delivery (contd)
  • Speculators tend to move out of the market a few
    days prior to first notice day

46
Principles of Futures Contract Pricing
  • Expectations hypothesis
  • Normal backwardation
  • Full carrying charge market
  • Reconciling the three theories

47
Expectations Hypothesis
  • The expectations hypothesis states that the
    futures price for a commodity is what the
    marketplace expects the cash price to be when the
    delivery month arrives
  • One of the major functions of the futures market
    is price discovery
  • The markets consensus about likely future prices
    for a commodity

48
Normal Backwardation
  • Normal backwardation
  • Is attributed to John Maynard Keynes
  • Argues that the futures price is a
    downward-biased estimate of the future cash price
  • The hedger essentially buys insurance
  • The speculator must be rewarded for taking the
    risk the hedger was unwilling to bear

49
Full Carrying Charge Market
  • A full carrying charge market is one where the
    prices for successive delivery months reflect the
    cost of holding the commodity
  • The futures price (FP) is equal to the current
    cash price (CP) plus the carrying charges (c)
    until the delivery month
  • FP CP c

50
Full Carrying Charge Market (contd)
  • Basis is the difference between the futures price
    and the current cash price
  • In a contango market, the futures price is
    greater than the cash price
  • In an inverted market, the cash price is greater
    than the futures price

51
Full Carrying Charge Market (contd)
  • Basis is the difference between the futures price
    and the current cash price (contd)
  • If the gap between the futures price and the cash
    price narrows, the basis strengthens
  • If the gap between the futures price and the cash
    price widens, the basis weakens

52
Full Carrying Charge Market (contd)
  • The basis is often very close to the carrying
    costs between the two points in time
  • Arbitrage would be possible if this were not the
    case
  • Exists if someone can buy a commodity, store it
    at a known rate, and get someone to promise to
    buy it later at a price that exceeds the cost of
    storage

53
Reconciling the Three Theories
  • The three theories are compatible
  • The expectations hypothesis says that a futures
    price is the expected cash price at the delivery
    date
  • A full carrying charge market adds costs of carry
    to the cash price to determine the futures price
  • Normal backwardation says that hedgers are
    willing to take a bid less than the actual
    expected future cash price

54
Foreign Currency Futures
  • Hedging and speculating with foreign currency
    futures
  • Pricing of foreign exchange futures contracts

55
Hedging and Speculating With Foreign Currency
Futures
  • Goods and services traded between countries must
    be valued in a currency
  • Relative exchange rates fluctuate daily due to
    changes in
  • The world political situation
  • International interest rates
  • Inflationary fears

56
Hedging and Speculating With Foreign Currency
Futures
  • U.S. importers purchasing goods denominated in a
    foreign currency engage in two transactions
  • Buying the foreign currency
  • Paying for the imported goods

57
Hedging and Speculating With Foreign Currency
Futures
  • Foreign currency futures can eliminate the price
    risk
  • Go long in foreign currency futures to lock in
    the future price for the foreign currency
  • If the currency appreciates, the gain in the
    futures market offsets the higher cost of the
    currency
  • If the currency depreciates, the lower cost in
    the cash market is offset by a loss in the
    futures market

58
Pricing of Foreign Exchange Futures Contracts
  • The cost of holding a currency is an opportunity
    cost measured by differences in the interest
    rates prevailing in the two countries
  • Interest rate parity states that securities with
    similar characteristics should differ in price by
    an amount equal to (but opposite in sign from)
    the difference between national interest rates in
    the two countries

59
Pricing of Foreign Exchange Futures Contracts
(contd)
  • A basic model for pricing foreign currency
    futures contracts

60
Pricing of Foreign Exchange Futures Contracts
(contd)
  • Example
  • Interest rates are 6 percent in Europe, and the
    prevailing eurodollar deposit rate is 7.5
    percent. The current dollar price for a euro is
    0.90.
  • For how much should a 90-day futures contract on
    euros sell?

61
Pricing of Foreign Exchange Futures Contracts
(contd)
  • Example (contd)
  • Solution Using the pricing model for foreign
    currency futures
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