
| Mar 12 2010, 17:08:45 GMT | Sydney: | 03:08 | Tokyo: | 02:08 | Barcelona: | 18:08 | London: | 17:08 | New York: | 12:08 | San Francisco: | 09:08 |
Key Points:
1.A futures contact is a
standardized agreement stating the commodity,
quantity, quality and delivery point or cash
settlement.
2.Price is discovered in
futures trading by the interaction of buyers and
sellers, representing supply and demand, from all
over the country and around the world.
3.Sellers remove their obligation to deliver on a
sold contract by buying back a contract before the
delivery date.
4.Buyers remove the
obligation to take delivery on a purchased
contract by selling back the contract before the
delivery date.
5.A short hedge protects
the seller of a commodity against falling prices.
6.A long hedge protects the buyer of a
commodity against rising prices.
Key Points:
1.Commodity exchanges
provide the location,
electronic marketplace
and rules for trading.
2.CME Clearing
acts as the seller to
every buyer and the buyer
to every seller. It also
is the central depository
of required good-faith
deposits (performance
bonds) that act to
guarantee contract
performance by all
parties.
3.Everyone who trades
futures must have an
account with a futures
brokerage.
4.Hedgers transfer risk
to speculators, who take
on risk in pursuit of
profit.
Key Points:
1.Futures contract
specifications are
developed to reflect
industry standards.
2.Futures contract
specifications change
over time to reflect
changing industry
standards.
3.It
is important to know how
your livestock compare to
the specifications of the
CME Group contracts.
Key Points:
1.Basis is the cash
market price minus the
futures price at the
completion of production.
2.For a short
hedger, the more positive
(stronger) the basis, the
higher the price received
for livestock.
3.For a long hedger, the
more negative (weaker)
the basis, the lower the
price paid for livestock.
4.Knowing the
expected basis enables a
hedger to translate a
futures price into an
expected local cash
price. The hedger can
compare that to the
expected break-even price
and decide whether or not
to hedge.
Key Points:
1.A short hedge
protects a livestock
seller against falling
prices.
2.Selling
livestock futures helps
to lock in a sale price
for livestock to the
extent that basis turns
out as expected.
3.A short hedge is
completed by
simultaneously buying
back the futures
contracts and selling the
livestock in the cash
market.
4.If
prices fall, the lower
cash price is offset by a
gain in the futures
market.
5.If
prices rise, the loss in
the futures market is
offset by a higher cash
market price.
6.Realized basis
determines how
advantageous the hedge
results are.
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