Lesson
8 -- The Trading Pit
Oh, yes. Thats where it all happens. Futures contracts are traded in trading pits at
the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) and other exchanges. Thats where traders
determine futures prices, which change from minute to minute as trading goes on.

What is trading?
In the futures industry, trading means buying and selling futures contracts. If you buy a
futures contract at one price and sell it at a higher price, you make money. If you sell
it at a lower price than what you paid for it, you lose money. Some people who trade
futures are in it to make a profit by trading. Others are producers or users of
commodities who are trading futures to protect a sale or purchase price.
The highest bid or lowest offer (the most competitive price) sets the true market value. A
trader must "best" or beat that price in order to set a new "best" bid
or offer. The seemingly frantic nature of the open outcry system is really about brokers
and traders constantly bidding or offering prices that the market will perceive as the
true value; and trades will then occur.

Hand signals, as well as vocal open outcry, relay quantity and price information between
traders and brokers across the pit. As in any auction situation, a traders action or
word is a bond. With billions of dollars at stake, each action in the pits is actually a
carefully recorded and executed trade agreement. Though seemingly chaotic, what you are
witnessing in a futures trading pit are market professionals conducting business at
lightning speed for either customers or for personal profit. In markets where prices move
rapidly within short periods of time, the speed of trade execution and timely delivery of
orders to customers is essential.
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.

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