Futures Trading Guide

Comodity Futures Trading Section


 


Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Futures-Trading
Email:
First Name:



Main Comodity Futures Trading sponsors


 

Latest Comodity Futures Trading Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Comodity Futures Trading!



Newest Best Sellers


Welcome to Futures Trading Guide

 

Comodity Futures Trading Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

Trading Commodity Futures Via The Internet

from:

Before online commodities and future trading became the high-rolling, high-stake investment ground that it is today, its early proprietors were farmers of the 1800’s.



These farmers would grow their crops and bring these to the market come harvest time in the hope of selling them. But the main concern then was that without an indicator, they could not efficiently gauge how much of their goods are needed therefore resulting either to shortages or excesses, both causing losses for the farmer.



With shortages causing loss of the opportunity to earn more and excesses causing meats and crops to rot and dairy products to spoil. Also, when a certain produce is out of season any product made from them would be priced so high due to its scarcity.



A central marketplace was subsequently created for farmers to take their harvests and sell them either for immediate or forward delivery. Immediate delivery is what is known now as the spot or cash market and forward delivery is now called futures market.



This concept helped stabilize prices for commodities that were out of season as well as served as an effective indicator of supply and demand therefore saving farmers thousands of dollars that would otherwise go to spoilage.



From forward contracts evolved commodities and futures contracts. Forward contracts are effectively agreements to buy now for payment and delivery at a specified date in the future, which is usually three months from the date of the contract.



These were originally only for food and agricultural products but now they have expanded to include financial instruments. Forward contracts have evolved and have been standardized into what we know today as futures contracts.



Basically, when dealing in online commodities or futures trading, a contract must have a seller (the producer) and a buyer (the consumer). If you purchase a futures contract, you are agreeing to buy a commodity that is not there yet for a specific price.



Although most futures contracts are based on an actual commodity, some futures contracts also are sold based on its future value based on stock market indices.



Unless you are a businessman who is into the trade of the actual commodity you purchased, you won't actually use the goods (if you’re the buyer) or actually provide the commodity (if you’re the seller) for which you're trading a futures contract.



Remember, buyers and sellers in the futures market primarily enter into futures contracts to minimize risk or speculate rather than to exchange physical goods.



On the other hand, online commodities differ from futures trading in that commodities trading may involve the physical delivery of the goods. In which case a receipt is issued in the favor of the buyer. This receipt enables the buyer to take the commodity from the warehouse.



Traders in online commodities and futures market can use different strategies to take advantage of rising and declining prices. The most common are known as going long, going short and spreads.



When an investor enters a contract by agreeing to buy and receive delivery of the commodity at a set price - it means that he or she is trying to earn from an anticipated future price increase, he or she is going long.



When he or she is looking to make a profit from declining price levels, this is going short. The speculator sells high now so he or she can repurchase the contract in the future at a lower price.



When one makes a spread, however, he or she is trying to benefit from the price difference between two separate contracts of the same commodity.



As an online commodities or futures trader, therefore, you should be armed with a firm grasp of how the market and contracts function.


Other Comodity Futures Trading related Articles

Commodity Futures Trading
Futures Charts Trend Trading
Futures Trading Online
Index Futures Trading
Futures And Options Trading

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


Comodity Futures Trading Specific links

Comodity Futures Trading News

Dodd Frank Complexities Heighten Energy Trading Impact Fears - AOL Energy


Dodd Frank Complexities Heighten Energy Trading Impact Fears
AOL Energy
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) is developing dozens of rules, as ordered by the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, to try to prevent the kinds of trading abuses that led to collapse in derivatives markets in 2008.
Bankers air fears over scope of swaps rulesBaltimore Sun
'Perfect World' Eludes Regulators in Aligning Swaps RulesBusinessWeek
American swap regulation: a class apartFT Alphaville (blog)
QFINANCE.com (blog)
all 22 news articles »

Read more...


Wall Street Groups Seek to Delay CFTC Limits on Speculation - BusinessWeek


Wall Street Groups Seek to Delay CFTC Limits on Speculation
BusinessWeek
8 (Bloomberg) -- Two Wall Street groups asked a federal judge to delay a US Commodity Futures Trading Commission rule that limits speculation, saying the regulation is already imposing “significant, irreversible costs.” The International Swaps and ...
Groups ask court to block CFTC position limit rulesReuters
CFTC Wants YOU to Register Your Mutual FundMutualFundWire.com
DLA Piper | CFTC final rule adopts LSOC model for cleared swaps collateralLinex Legal (press release) (registration)
Lexology (registration) -Mondaq News Alerts (registration)
all 17 news articles »

Read more...


Nasdaq launches spot gold futures - Financial Times


Nasdaq launches spot gold futures
Financial Times
By Telis Demos in New York Nasdaq OMX, the global exchange group, is prospecting for new markets by branching out into US precious metals trading, with the launch of spot gold futures. In a partnership with IKON Global Markets, a commodity trading ...
NASDAQ OMX and IKON GLOBAL MARKETS Launch Spot Gold FuturesMarketWatch (press release)

all 9 news articles »

Read more...


ICE Sees 2012 Revenue Rising On Commodities Trade - Wall Street Journal


Financial News

ICE Sees 2012 Revenue Rising On Commodities Trade
Wall Street Journal
Atlanta-based ICE reported on Wednesday a 28% rise in fourth-quarter earnings due to solid trading volume in the commodity exchange operator's futures contracts and over-the-counter energy business. Ongoing growth in ICE's energy and agricultural ...
ICE to launch EU carbon permits for aviationReuters

all 43 news articles »

Read more...


US Cash Grains-Bids steady in slow sales ahead of report - Reuters Africa


Bloomberg

US Cash Grains-Bids steady in slow sales ahead of report
Reuters Africa
Feb 8 (Reuters) - Spot basis bids for corn and soybeans held mostly steady around the US Midwest on Wednesday in slow trading of each commodity ahead of a government crop report due early on Thursday. * CBOT corn and soybean futures traded in narrow ...
Farmers Plan Biggest U.S. Crop Boost Since 1984, Led by Corn: CommoditiesBloomberg
Corn Rises on South American Supply Concerns; Soybeans DeclineBusinessWeek
Market forecaster for Feb. 6Midwest Producer
Pork Magazine -Nation's Restaurant News -San Francisco Chronicle
all 179 news articles »

Read more...