Futures Trading Guide

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All About The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)

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The Commmodity Futures Trading Commission is a US government sponsored independent body that is tasked to monitor and record futures contracts trading activities that occur on futures exchanges in the United States. It was formed by the US Congress in 1974, and has the power to suspend, fine and impose legal sanctions on an individual or a firm in the event of fraud, misconduct or other cases of rule violations.



The agency is also responsible for publishing weekly updates on the holdings of the over twenty market segments in existence today.



These reports, called the 'commitments of traders report' or the COTR are handed out at the end of each week, usually every Friday. They contain information on open interest splits by non-reportable and reportable open interest and non-commercial and commercial open interest.



To make things short, the aim of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission is to protect the public and market participants from abusive and manipulative practices related to the sale of financial futures, options and commodities, and to make sure that all transactions are conducted in a transparent, financially viable and competitive manner.



During its inception, the CFTC was merely tasked to regulated options and commodity futures markets in the US. However, with the introduction of the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, or CFMA, the CFTC's duties have been expanded.



Via effective oversight, the agency makes sure that the futures market is able to provide market participants a means toward offsetting pricing risks and price discovery.



The CFTC has five commissioners, each of whom is appointed the president and serve in five-year intervals. One of the five commissioners is named chairman, with the approval of the senate, with rules stipulating that not more than three commissioners should be sourced from the same political party, to provide fairness.



The agency is headquartered in Washington, but it also holds offices in key cities that have futures exchanges, like Chicago, New York, Minneapolis and Kansas.



The CFTC has six key operating units: The Division of Clearing and Intermediary Oversight, the Division of Market Oversight, the Division of Enforcement, the Office of Chief Economist, the Office of the General Counsel and the Office of the Executive Director.



Each unit has a specific function, all of which sharing the goal of making sure that all transactions conducted under it satisfy regulations and are in the best interests of market participants.



There is a wealth of information about how to properly trade futures in the CFTC website, which can be found at www.cftc.gov. Check the site for further details.


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Nasdaq Futures Trading News

U.S. Stock Futures Slip on Greece; Bernanke, Coinstar, NCR Corp. In Focus

Futures activity is pointing a drop of about 34 points on the open for the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) this morning, as Greece's debt woes continue to worry Wall Street. Investors will also be keeping tabs on Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's testimony before the Senate Banking Committee later this morning. At last check, Dow Mini futures were trading 34 points below fair value ...

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U.S. Stock Futures Split Ahead of Fed as Apple's Blowout Sends Nasdaq Higher

Wall Street is divided this morning, with Dow and S&P futures headed lower ahead of a Federal Open Market Committee decision on U.S. monetary policy, while Nasdaq futures are rallying in the wake of a blowout quarterly report from iPhone company Apple Inc. (AAPL). Specifically, futures on the Mini Dow Jones Industrials are trading roughly 43 points below fair value, with S&P 500 Index (SPX ...

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CBOE Futures Exchange Experiences Busiest January Ever, Trading Volume Up 4% Over 2011

CHICAGO, Feb. 1, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- The CBOE Futures Exchange, LLC (CFE) today announced that trading volume during January 2012 totaled 811,283 contracts, an increase of four percent from the 778,157 ...

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Stock Futures Slide on Greek Debt Fears

NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- U.S. stock futures were signaling a weaker open Monday as Greek debt worries once again put a damper on investor enthusiasm. Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average were falling 39 points, or 57.2 points below fair value, at 12,754. Futures for the S&P 500 were falling 5.5 points, or 7.7 points below fair value, at 1334, and futures for the Nasdaq were sliding 9 ...

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Apple lifts Nasdaq futures in hesitant market

By Edward Krudy NEW YORK (Reuters) - Dow and S&P 500 index futures edged lower on Wednesday as the market continues to show signs of fatigue this week after a strong run from late last year, but the Nasdaq ...

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