Lesson
1 -- The Futures Contract
A futures contract is an agreement to buy or sell a commodity at a date in the future.
Everything about a futures contract is standardized except its price. All of the terms
under which the commodity, service or financial instrument is to be transferred are
established before active trading begins, so neither side is hampered by ambiguity. The
price for a futures contract is whats determined in the trading pit of a futures
exchange

Random Length Lumber
Take the Random Length Lumber futures contract which trades at the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange (CME) as an example. The contract quantity is already determined (80,000 board
feet). So is the quality of the Lumber (grade stamped Construction and Standard, Standard
and Better, or #1 or #2 2X4s of random lengths from 8 feet to 20 feet).
The delivery date of the contract is already decided too. Thats when the contract
matures. There are six different Lumber futures contracts traded
each year, each with a specified delivery date February, March, May, July,
September and November. So when you buy a March Lumber
contract, you know the contract matures in March.
The delivery points for Random Length futures contracts are also known. That means if you
make or take delivery of 1 Lumber contract (equivalent
to 80,000 board feet of Lumber) when the delivery date arrives, you know exactly to which
warehouses you can send your truck. (For many
commodities, theres a cash settlement instead of delivery of the actual commodity.)
Heres an interesting point to remember. Most people who buy and sell Random Length
Lumber futures dont deliver or pick up a load of lumber
when the contract matures. They usually offset the trade and get out of the market before
that point. They dont really want the Lumber. Theyve
traded the futures contracts for other reasons such as protection against rising or
falling lumber prices or simply earning a profit on the trade.

On-Line Trading Lessons -- Courtesy of the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange
Futures trading is highly speculative, and
can involve the loss of some or all of any monies you may commit to such trading.
No responsibility is assumed for the use of material available at this
web site, and no express or implied warranties are made. Futures trading is highly
speculative, and can involve the loss of some or all of any monies you may commit to such
trading.

|