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Commodity Futures Glossary
Like
many other industries, the futures industry has its own “language” –
sometimes just jargon but also a number of unique terms that apply
specifically to the trading instruments being discussed.
When other traders are talking futures, it may be important that you
understand what these terms mean. You will find other references to
trading terms and lingo on this site, but here is a handy reference
guide that gives you a complete alphabetical listing of the many
terms traders use. You may not have to deal with many of these
terms, but someone in the industry does, and it may be helpful to
know what a new term means should you ever encounter it.
A
B C D
E F G
H I J
K L M
N O P
Q R S
T U V
W X Y
Z

A
Abandon - The act of
an option holder in electing not to exercise or offset an option.
Accrued Interest
- Interest earned between the most recent payment and the present
date but not yet paid to the lender.
Accommodation Trading
- Non-competitive trading entered into by a trader, usually to
assist another with illegal trades.
Actuals - The
physical or cash commodity, as distinguished from commodity futures
contracts. Also see Cash Commodity, Spot Commodity.
Add-on Method - A
method of paying interest where the interest is added onto the
principle at maturity or interest payment dates.
Adjusted Futures Price
- The cash-price equivalent reflected in the current futures price.
This is calculated by taking the futures price times the conversion
factor for the particular financial instrument (e.g., bond or note)
being delivered.
Alternate Delivery Procedure (ADP)
- A contract delivery method that permits the buyer and seller, by
agreement, to settle their delivery commitment independent of the
exchange.
Against Actuals -
Also see Exchange for Physicals.
Aggregation - The
principle under which all futures positions owned or controlled by
one trader (or group of traders acting in concert) are combined to
determine reporting status and speculative limit compliance.
Allowances - The
discounts (premiums) allowed for grades or locations of a commodity
lower (higher) than the par (or basis) grade or location specified
in the futures contract. Also see Differentials.
Approved Delivery Facility
- Any bank, stockyard, ill, store, house, plant, elevator or other
depository that is authorized by an exchange for the delivery of
commodities tendered on futures contracts.
Arbitrage - The
simultaneous purchase of similar commodities in the same or
different markets profit from a discrepancy in prices. Also includes
some aspects of hedging. Also see Spread, Switch.
Arbitration - The
procedure of settling disputes between members, or between members
and customers.
Asian Option - An
option whose payoff depends on the average price of the underlying
asset during some portion of the life of the option.
Assign - To make
an option seller perform his obligation to assume a short futures
position (as the seller of a call option) or a long futures position
(as a seller of a put option).
Assignable Contract
- One which allows the holder to convey his rights to a third party.
Exchange-traded contracts are not assignable.
Associated Person (AP)
- An individual who solicits orders, customers, or customer funds
(or who supervises persons performing such duties) on behalf of a
Futures Commission Merchant, an Introducing Broker, a Commodity
Trading Advisor, or a Commodity Pool Operator.
Associate Membership
- A Chicago Board of Trade membership that allows an individual to
trade financial instrument futures and other designated markets.
At-the-Market -
An order to buy or sell a futures contract at whatever price is
obtainable when the order reaches the trading floor. Also called a
Market Order.
At-the-Money Option
- An option with a strike price that is equal, or approximately
equal, to the current market price of the underlying futures
contract.
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B
Backpricing - Fixing the price of a
commodity for which the commitment to purchase has been made in
advance. The buyer can fix the price relative to any monthly or
periodic delivery using the futures markets.
Backwardation -
Market situation in which futures prices are progressively lower in
the distant delivery months. For instance, if the gold quotation for
February is $160.00 per ounce and that for June is $155.00 per
ounce, the backwardation for four months against January is $5.00
per ounce. (Backwardation is the opposite of contango.) See
Inverted Market.
Balance of Payment
- A summary of the international transactions of a country over a
period of time including commodity and service transactions, and
gold movements.
Bar Chart - A
chart that graphs the high, low, and settlement prices for a
specific trading session over a given period of time.
Basis - The
difference between the current cash price and the futures price of
the same commodity. Unless otherwise specified, the price of the
nearby futures contract month is used to calculate the basis.
Basis Grade - The
grade of a commodity used as the standard or par grade of a futures
contract.
Basis Point - The
measurement of a change in the yield of a debt security. One basis
point equals 1/100 of one percent.
Basis Quote -
Offer or sale of a cash commodity in terms of the difference above
or below a futures price (e.g., 10 cents over December corn).
Basis Risk - The
risk associated with an unexpected widening or narrowing of basis
between the time a hedging position is established and the time that
it is lifted.
Bear - Someone
who expects a decline in prices. The opposite of bull. A news
item is considered bearish if it is expected to bring lower prices.
Bearish Opinion -
A belief that the price of the commodity underlying the futures
contract will decline and, therefore, futures prices will decline.
Bear Market - A
period of declining market prices.
Bear Spread - The
simultaneous purchase and sale of two futures contracts in the same
or related commodities with the intention of profiting from a
decline in prices but at the same time limiting the potential loss
if this expectation is wrong. In the agricultural products, this is
accomplished by selling a nearby delivery and buying a deferred
delivery.
Bear Vertical Spread
- A strategy employed when an investor expects a decline in a
commodity price but at the same time seeks to limit the potential
loss if this expectation is wrong. This spread requires the
simultaneous purchase and sale of options of the same class and
expiration date but different strike prices. For example, if call
options are spread, the purchased option must have a higher exercise
price than the sold option.
Beta (Beta Coefficient)
- A measure of the variability of rate of return or value of a stock
or portfolio compared to that of the overall market.
Bid - An offer to
buy a specific quantity of a commodity at a stated price, subject to
immediate acceptance.
Black-Scholes Model
- An option pricing formula initially derived by F. Black and M.
Scholes for securities options and later refined by Black for
options on futures.
Board of Trade -
Any exchange or association, whether incorporated or unincorporated,
of persons who are engaged in the business of buying or selling any
commodity or receiving the same for sale on consignment.
Board of Trade Clearing Corporation - An
independent corporation that settles all trades made at the Chicago
Board of Trade acting as a guarantor for all trades cleared by it,
reconciles all clearing member firm accounts each day to ensure that
all gains have been credited and all losses have been collected, and
sets and adjusts clearing member firm margins for changing market
conditions. Also referred to as clearing corporation. Also see
Clearinghouse.
Book Entry Securities
- Electronically recorded securities that include each creditor's
name, address, Social Security or tax identification number, and
dollar amount loaned, (i.e., no certificates are issued to bond
holders, instead the transfer agent electronically credits interest
payments to each creditor's bank account on a designated date).
Booking the Basis
- A forward pricing sales arrangement in which the cash price is
determined either by the buyer or seller within a specified time. At
that time, the previously-agreed basis is applied to the
then-current futures quotation.
Book Transfer - A series of accounting or
bookkeeping entries used to settle a series of cash market
transactions.
Box Transaction -
An option position in which the holder has established a long call
and a short put at one strike price and a short call and a long put
at another strike price, all of which are in the same contract month
in the same commodity.
Break - A rapid
and sharp price change.
Break-Even Point
- The price (or prices) at which a particular option or straddle
will cover premium and transaction costs.
Broker - A person
paid a fee or commission for executing buy or sell orders of a
customer. In commodity futures trading, the term may refer to: (1)
Floor Broker--a person who actually executes orders on the trading
floor of an exchange; (2) Account Executive, Associated Person,
Registered Commodity Representative or Customer's Man--the person
who deals with customers in the offices of futures commission
merchant; and (3) the Futures Commission Merchant.
Brokerage Fee -
See Commission Fee.
Brokerage
House
- See Futures Commission Merchant.
Bucketing
- Directly or indirectly taking the opposite side of a customer's
order into the broker's own account or into an account in which the
broker has an interest, without open and competitive execution of
the order on an exchange.
Bucket Shop - A
brokerage enterprise which books (i.e., takes the opposite
side of) a customer's order without actually having it executed on
an exchange.
Bull - Someone
who expects a rise in prices. The opposite of bear. A news
item is considered bullish if it portends higher prices.
Bull Market - A
period of rising market prices.
Bull Spread - The
simultaneous purchase of the nearby month, and selling the deferred
month, to profit from the change in the price relationship.
Bull Vertical Spread
- A strategy used when an investor expects that the price of a
commodity will go up but at the same time seeks to limit the
potential loss should this judgment be in error. This strategy
involves the simultaneous purchase and sale of options of the same
class and expiration date but different strike prices. For example,
if call options are spread, the purchased option must have a lower
exercise price than the sold option.
Bullish Opinion -
A belief that the price of the commodity underlying the futures
contract will rise and, therefore, futures prices will rise.
Bullion - Bars or
ingots of precious metals, usually cast in standardized sizes.
Buoyant - A
market in which prices have a tendency to rise easily with a
considerable show of strength.
Butterfly Spread
- A three-legged spread in futures or options. In the options
spread, the options have the same expiration date but differ in
strike prices. For example, a butterfly spread in soybean call
options might consist of two short calls at a $6.00 strike price,
one long call at a $6.50 strike price, and one long call at a $5.50
strike price.
Buy In - To cover
or close out a short position. See Offset.
Buyer - A market
participant who takes a long futures position or buys an option. An
option buyer is also called a holder, or owner.
Buyer's Market -
A condition of the market in which there is an abundance of goods
available and hence buyers can afford to be selective and may be
able to buy at less than the price that had previously prevailed.
Also see Seller's Market.
Buying Hedge (or Long Hedge)
- Hedging transaction in which futures contracts are bought to
protect against possible increased cost of commodities. Also see
Hedging, Purchasing Hedge.
Buy (or Sell) On Close
- To buy (or sell) at the end of the trading session within the
closing price range.
Buy (or Sell) On Opening
- To buy (or sell) at the beginning of a trading session within the
opening price range.
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C
C & F
- Cost and Freight paid to a point of destination and included in
the price quoted. Same as C.A.F.
Calendar Spread -
See Interdelivery Spread or Horizontal Spread.
Call - (1) A
period at the opening and the close of some futures markets in which
the price for each futures contract is established by auction; (2)
Buyer's Call generally applies to cotton, also called call sale.
A purchase of a specified quantity of a specific grade of a
commodity at a fixed number of points above or below a specified
delivery month futures price with the buyer allowed a period of time
to fix the price either by purchasing a future for the account of
the seller or telling the seller when he wishes to fix the price;
(3) Seller's Call, also called call purchase, is the
same as the buyer's call except that the seller has the right to
determine the time to fix the price; (4) option contract giving the
buyer the right to purchase the commodity or to enter into a long
position; and (5) the requirement that a financial instrument be
returned to the issuer prior to maturity, with principal and accrued
interest paid off upon return.
Call Option
- A contract that grants the purchaser the right, but not the
obligation, to buy the underlying instrument at the specified strike
price on or before the expiration date. The buyer pays a premium to
the seller of the contract. A call option is bought with the
expectation of a rise in prices (going long). See Put Option.
Call Rule - An
exchange regulation under which an official bid price for a cash
commodity is competitively established at the close of each day's
trading. It holds until the next opening of the exchange.
Canceling Order - An order that deletes a
customer's previous order.
Capping -
Effecting commodity or security transactions shortly prior to an
option's expiration date by depressing or preventing a rise in the
price of the commodity or security so that previously written call
options will expire worthless and the premium received there from
will be protected.
Carrying Broker -
A member of a futures exchange, usually a futures commmission
merchant (FCM), through whom another broker or customer elects to
clear all or some of their trades.
Carrying Charge Market
- A futures market where the price difference between delivery
months reflects the total costs of interest, insurance, and storage.
Carrying Charges
- Cost of storing a physical commodity or holding a financial
instrument over a period of time. Includes insurance, storage, and
interest on the invested funds as well as other incidental costs. It
is a carrying charge market when there are higher futures prices for
each successive contract maturity. If the carrying charge is
adequate to reimburse the holder, it is called a "full charge." Also
see Negative Carry, Positive Carry and
Contango.
Carryover - Grain
and oilseed commodities not consumed during the marketing year and
remaining in storage at year's end. These stocks are "carried over"
into the next marketing year and added to the stocks produced during
that crop year.
Cash Commodity -
The physical or actual commodity as distinguished from the futures
contract. Sometimes called Spot Commodity or Actuals.
Cash Contract - A
sales agreement for either immediate or future delivery of the
actual product.
Cash Forward Sale
- See Forward Contracting.
Cash Market - The
place where people buy and sell the actual commodities, taking the
form of: (1) an organized, self-regulated central market (e.g., a
commodity exchange); (2) a decentralized over-the-counter market; or
(3) a local organization, such as a grain elevator or meat
processor, which provides a market for a small region.
Cash Price - The
price in the marketplace for actual cash or spot commodities to be
delivered via customary market channels.
Cash Settlement -
Transactions generally involving index-based futures contracts that
are settled in cash, based on the actual value of the index on the
last trading day, in contrast to those that specify the delivery of
a commodity or financial instrument.
Central Bank - A
financial institution that has official or semiofficial status in a
federal government. Central banks are the instruments used by
governments to expand, contract or stabilize the supply of money and
credit. They hold reserves of other banks, act as fiscal agents for
their governments and can issue paper money.
Certified Stocks
- Quantities of commodities designated and certified for delivery by
an exchange under its trading and testing regulations at delivery
points specified and approved by the exchange.
CFTC - See
Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
CFO - Cancel
Former Order.
Charting - The
use of graphs and charts in the technical analysis of futures
markets to plot trends of price movements, average movements of
price, volume of trading and open interest. See Technical
Analysis.
Chartist -
Technical trader who reacts to signals read from graphs of price
movements.
Cheap -
Colloquialism implying that a commodity is underpriced.
Cheapest-to-Deliver
- A method to determine which particular cash debt instrument is
most profitable to deliver against a futures contract.
Chooser Option -
An option which is transacted in the present but at a pre-specified
future date is chosen to be either a put or a call option.
Churning -
Excessive trading of an account by a broker with control of the
account for the purpose of generating commissions while disregarding
the interests of the customer.
Circuit Breaker -
A system of trading halts and price limits on equities and
derivative markets designed to provide a cooling-off period during
large, intra-day market declines. The first known use of the term
circuit breaker in this context was in the Report of the
Presidential Task Force on Market Mechanisms (January 1988), which
recommended that circuit breakers be adopted following the market
break of October 1987.
C.I.F. - Cost,
insurance and freight paid to a point of destination and included in
the price quoted.
Class (of options)
- Options of the same type (i.e., either puts or calls, but not
both) covering the same underlying futures contract or physical
commodity (e.g., a March call at strike price 62 and a May call at
strike price 58).
Clear - The process by which a
clearinghouse maintains records of all trades and settles margin
flow on a daily mark-to-market basis for its clearing members.
Clearing - The
procedure through which the clearing house or association becomes
buyer to each seller of a futures contract, and seller to each
buyer, and assumes responsibility for protecting buyers and sellers
from financial loss by assuring performance on each contract.
Clearing Corporation
- See Board of Trade Clearing Corporation.
Clearinghouse -
An agency or separate corporation of a futures exchange that is
responsible for settling trading accounts, clearing trades,
collecting and maintaining margin monies, regulating delivery, and
reporting trading data. Clearinghouses act as third parties to all
futures and options contracts - acting as a buyer to every clearing
member seller, and a seller to every clearing member buyer.
Clearing Margin -
Financial safeguards to ensure that clearing members (usually
companies or corporations) perform on the customers' open futures
and options contracts. Clearing margins are distinct from customer
margins that individual buyers and sellers of futures and options
contracts are required to deposit with brokers. See Customer
Margin.
Clearing Member - A member of an exchange
clearinghouse. Memberships in clearing organizations are usually
held by companies. Clearing members are responsible for the
financial commitments of customers that clear through their firm.
Clearing Price -
See Settlement Price.
Clerk - A
member's employee who is registered to work on the trading floor as
a runner or phone person.
Close - The
period at the end of the trading session officially designated by
the exchange during which all transactions are considered made at
the close. Also see Call.
Closing-Out -
Liquidating an existing long or short futures or option position
with an equal and opposite transaction. Also known as Offset.
Closing Price (or Range)
- The price (or price range) recorded in trading that takes place in
the final moments of a day's trade that are officially designated as
the close.
Combination -
Puts and calls held either long or short with different strike
prices and expirations.
Commercial - An
entity involved in the production, processing, or merchandising of a
commodity.
Commercial Grain Stocks
- Domestic grain in store in public and private elevators at
important markets and grain afloat in vessels or barges in harbors
of lake and seaboard ports.
Commercial Stocks
- Commodity in storage in public and private elevators or warehouses
at important markets and afloat in vessels or barges in harbors and
ports.
Commission - (1)
The charge made by a commission house for buying and selling
commodities; (2) the CFTC.
Commission House
- See Futures Commission Merchant (FCM).
Commitments -
Made when a trader assumes the obligation to accept or make delivery
by entering into a futures contract. See Open Interest.
Commodity - An
article of commerce or a product that can be used for commerce. In a
narrow sense, products traded on an authorized commodity exchange.
The types of commodities include agricultural products, metals,
petroleum, foreign currencies, and financial instruments and
index.
Commodity Credit Corp.
- A branch of the U.S. Department of Agriculture that supervises the
government's farm loan and subsidy programs.
Commodity Exchange Act
- Federal act passed in 1936 establishing the Commodity Exchange
Authority and placing futures trading in a wide range of commodities
under the regulation of the government.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)
- The Federal regulatory agency established by the CFTC Act of 1974
to administer the Commodity Exchange Act.
Commodity-linked Bond
- A bond in which payment to the investor is dependent on the price
level of such commodities as crude oil, gold, or silver at maturity.
Commodity Option
- See Option, Puts and Calls.
Commodity Pool -
An investment trust, syndicate or similar form of enterprise
operated for the purpose of trading commodity futures or option
contracts.
Commodity Pool Operator
- An individual or organization that operates or solicits funds for
a commodity pool.
Commodity Price Index
- Index or average, which may be weighted, of selected commodity
prices, intended to be representative of the markets in general or a
specific subset of commodities (for example, grains or livestock).
Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA)
- A person who, for compensation or profit, directly or indirectly
advises others as to the value or the advisability of buying or
selling futures contracts or commodity options. Advising indirectly
includes exercising trading authority over a customer's account as
well as providing recommendations through written publications or
other media.
Concurrent Indicators
- See Lagging Indicators.
Congestion - (1)
A market situation in which shorts attempting to cover their
positions are unable to find an adequate supply of contracts
provided by longs willing to liquidate or by new sellers willing to
enter the market, except at sharply higher prices; (2) in technical
analysis, a period of time characterized by repetitious and limited
price fluctuations.
Consignment - A
shipment made by a producer or dealer to an agent elsewhere with the
understanding that the commodities in question will be cared for or
sold at the highest obtainable price. Title to the merchandise
shipped on consignment rests with the shipper until the goods are
disposed of according to agreement.
Consumer
Price Index (CPI)
- A major inflation measure computed by the U.S. Department
of Commerce. It measures the changes in prices of a fixed market
basket of some 385 goods and services in the previous month.
Contango - Market
situation in which prices in succeeding delivery months are
progressively higher than in the nearest delivery month; the
opposite of "backwardation."
Contract - (1) A
unit of trading for a commodity future or option; (2) An agreement
to buy or sell a specified commodity, detailing the amount and grade
of the product and the date on which the contract will mature and
become deliverable.
Contract Grades -
See Deliverable Grades.
Contract Market -
(1) A board of trade or exchange designated by the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission to trade futures or options under the Commodity
Exchange Act; (2) Sometimes the futures contract itself (e.g., corn
is a contract market).
Contract Month -
See Delivery Month.
Contract Unit -
The actual amount of a commodity represented in a contract.
Controlled Account
- See Discretionary Account.
Convergence - The
tendency for prices of physicals and futures to approach one
another, usually during the delivery month. Also called a
narrowing of the basis.
Conversion - When
trading options on futures contracts, a position created by selling
a call option, buying a put option, and buying the underlying
futures contract, where the options have the same strike price and
the same expiration.
Conversion Factor
- A factor used to equate the price of T-bond and T-note futures
contracts with the various cash T-bonds and T-notes eligible for
delivery. This factor is based on the relationship of the
cash-instrument coupon to the required 8 percent deliverable grade
of a futures contract as well as taking into account the cash
instrument's maturity or call.
Corner - (1) To
corner is to secure such relative control of a commodity or security
that its price can be manipulated; (2) In the extreme situation,
obtaining contracts requiring delivery of more commodities or
securities than are available for delivery.
Corn-Hog-Ratio -
See Feed Ratio.
Cost of Carry (or Carry)
- See Carrying Charge.
Cost of Tender -
Total of various charges incurred when a commodity is certified and
delivered on a futures contract.
Counter-Trend Trading
- In technical analysis, the method by which a trader takes a
position contrary to the current market direction in anticipation of
a change in that direction.
Coupon (Coupon Rate)
- The interest rate on a debt instrument expressed in terms of a
percent on an annualized basis that the issuer guarantees
to pay the holder until maturity.
Cover - (1)
Purchasing futures to offset a short position. Same as Short
Covering. See Offset, Liquidation; (2) To have in hand the physical
commodity when a short futures or leverage sale is made, or to
acquire commodity that might be deliverable on a short sale.
Covered Option -
A short call or put option position which is covered by the sale or
purchase of the underlying futures contract or physical commodities.
For example, in the case of options on futures contracts a covered
call is a short call position combined with a long futures position.
A covered put is a short put position combined with a short futures
position.
Crack - In energy
futures, the simultaneous purchase of crude oil futures and the sale
of petroleum product futures to establish a refining margin. See
Gross Processing Margin.
Crop (Marketing) Year
- The time period from one harvest to the next for agricultural
commodities. The crop year varies slightly with each commodity
(i.e., the marketing year for soybeans begins September 1 and ends
in August 31. The futures contract month of November represents the
first major new-crop marketing month, and the contract month of July
represents the last major old-crop marketing month for soybeans.
Crop Reports -
Reports compiled by the U.S. Department of Agriculture on various ag
commodities that are released throughout the year. Information in
the reports include estimates on planted acreage, yield, and
expected production, as well as comparison of production from
previous years.
Cross-Hedge -
Hedging a cash market position in a futures contract for a different
but price-related commodity (e.g., using soybean meal futures to
hedge fish meal).
Cross-margining -
A procedure for margining related securities options and futures
contracts jointly when different clearing houses clear each side of
the position.
Cross-Rate - In
foreign exchange, the price of one currency in terms of another
currency in the market of a third country. For example, a London
dollar cross-rate could be the price of one U.S. dollar in terms of
deutsche marks on the London market.
Cross Trading -
Offsetting or noncompetitive match of the buy order of one customer
against the sell order of another, a practice that is permissible
only when executed in accordance with the Commodity Exchange Act,
CFTC regulations, and rules of the contract market.
Crush Spread - In
the soybean futures market, the simultaneous purchase of soybean
futures and the sale of soybean meal and soybean oil futures to
establish a processing margin. See Gross Processing Margin.
Curb Trading -
Trading by telephone or by other means that takes place after the
official market has closed. Originally it took place in the street
on the curb outside the market. Under CFTC rules, curb trading is
illegal. Also known as kerb trading.
Current Delivery Month
- The futures contract which matures and becomes deliverable during
the present month. Also called Spot Month. Daily Price Limits. See
Limit Up, or Down).
Current Yield -
The ratio of the coupon to the current market price of the debt
instrument.
Customer Margin -
Within the futures industry, financial guarantees required of both
buyers and sellers of futures contracts and sellers of options
contracts to ensure fulfilling of contract obligations. FCMs are
responsible for overseeing customer margin accounts. Margins are
determined on the basis of market risk and contract value. Also
referred to as performance-bond margin. See Clearing Margin.
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D
Day Order
- An order that expires automatically at the end of each day's
trading session if not filled. There may be a day order with time
contingency. For example, an off at a specific time order is
an order that remains in force until the specified time during the
session is reached. At such time, the order is automatically
canceled.
Daily Trading Limit
- The maximum price range set by the exchange cash day for a
contract.
Day Traders -
Commodity traders, generally members of the exchange on the trading
floor, who take positions in commodities and then offset them prior
to the close of trading on the same trading day.
Day Trading -
Establishing and offsetting the same futures market position within
one day.
Dealer Option - A
put or call on a physical commodity, not originating on or subject
to the rules of an exchange, in which the obligation for performance
rests with the writer of the option. Dealer options are normally
written by firms handling the underlying commodity and offered to
public customers, although the reverse may also be true.
Deck - The orders
for purchase or sale of futures and option contracts held in the
hands of a floor broker.
Declaration Date
- See Expiration Date.
Declaration (of Options)
- See Exercise.
Default - Failure
to perform on a futures contract as required by exchange rules, such
as failure to meet a margin call, or to make or take delivery.
Deferred Futures
- The futures contracts that expire during the most distant months.
Also called Back Months. See Forward Purchase or Sale.
Deferred (Delivery) Month
- The more distant month(s) in which futures trading is taking
place, as distinguished from the nearby (delivery) month.
Deliverable Grades
- The standard grades of commodities or instruments listed in the
rules of the exchanges that must be met when delivering cash
commodities against futures contracts. Grades are often accompanied
by a schedule of discounts and premiums allowable for delivery of
commodities of lesser or greater quality than the standard called
for by the exchange. Also referred to as contract grades.
Delivery - The
transfer of the cash commodity from the seller of a futures contract
to the buyer of a futures contract. Each futures exchange has
specific procedures for delivery of a cash commodity. Some futures
contracts, such as stock index contracts, are cash settled.
Delivery Commitment, Buyer's
- The written notice given by the buyer of his intention to take
delivery against a long futures position on delivery day.
Delivery Commitment, Seller's
- The written notice given by the seller of his intention to make
delivery against the short futures position on delivery day.
Delivery, Current
- Deliveries being made during a present month. Sometimes current
delivery is used as a synonym for nearby delivery.
Delivery Date - The date on
which the commodity or instrument of delivery must be delivered to
fulfill the terms of a contract.
Delivery Instrument
- A document used to effect delivery on a futures contract, such as
a warehouse receipt or shipping certificate.
Delivery Month -
The specified month within which a futures contract matures and can
be settled by making or accepting delivery. Also referred to as
contract month.
Delivery, Nearby
- The nearest traded month. In plural form, one of the nearer
trading months.
Delivery Notice -
The written notice given by the seller of his intention to make
delivery against an open short futures position on a particular
date. This notice, delivered through the clearing house, is separate
and distinct from the warehouse receipt or other instrument that
will be used to transfer title.
Delivery Option -
A provision of a futures contract which provides the short with
flexibility in regard to timing, location, quantity, or quality in
the delivery process.
Delivery Points -
Those locations designated by commodity exchanges where stocks of a
commodity represented by a futures contract may be delivered in
fulfillment of the contract.
Delivery Price -
The price fixed by the clearing house at which deliveries on futures
are invoiced--generally the price at which the futures contract is
settled when deliveries are made.
Delta - A measure
of how much an option premium changes, given a unit change in the
underlying futures price. Delta is often interpreted as the
probability that the option will be in-the-money by expiration.
Delta Margining -
An option margining system used by some exchanges for exchange
members and/or floor traders which equates the changes in option
premiums with the changes in the price of the underlying futures
contract to determine risk factors on which to base the margin
requirements.
Delta Value - The
expected change in an option's price given a one-unit change in the
price of the underlying futures contract or physical commodity.
Deposit - The
initial outlay required by a broker of a client to open a futures
position, returnable on liquidation of that position.
Devaluation - A
formal and official decrease in the value of a country's
currency, typically by that country.
Diagonal Spread -
A spread between two call options or two put options with different
strike prices and different expiration dates.
Differentials -
Price differences between classes, grades, and delivery locations of
various stocks of the same commodity.
Discount - (1)
The amount a price would be reduced to purchase a commodity of
lesser grade; (2) sometimes used to refer to the price differences
between futures of different delivery months, as in the phrase
July at a discount to May, indicating that the price for the
July future is lower than that of May; (3) an option is trading at a
discount if it is trading for less than its intrinsic value.
Discount Basis -
Method of quoting securities where the price is expressed as an
annualized discount from maturity value.
Discount Bond - A
bond selling below par.
Discount Method -
A method of paying interest by issuing a security at less than par
and repaying par value at maturity. The difference between the
higher par value and the lower purchase price is the interest.
Discount Rate -
The interest rate charged on loans by the Federal Reserve Bank.
Discretionary Account
- An arrangement by which the holder of an account gives written
power of attorney to someone else, often a broker, to make trading
decisions. Also known as a managed or controlled account.
Distant or Deferred Delivery
- Usually means one of the more distant months in which futures
trading is taking place.
Dominant Future -
That future having the largest number of open contracts.
Double Hedging -
As used by the CFTC, it implies a situation where a trader holds a
long position in the futures market in excess of the speculative
limit as an offset to a fixed price sale even though the trader has
an ample supply of the commodity on hand to fill all sales
commitments.
Double Top -or- Double Bottom
- Prices reaching their 12-month high or 12-month low two times. The
second top or bottom may be used as a new number one point or may be
considered the three point in a 1-2-3 formation.
Dual Trading -
Dual trading occurs when: (1) a floor broker executes customer
orders and, on the same day, trades for his own account or an
account in which he has an interest; or (2) an FCM carries customer
accounts and also trades, or permits its employees to trade, in
accounts in which it has a proprietary interest, also on the same
trading day.
Duration - A
measure of a bond's price sensitivity to changes in interest rates.
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E
Early Exercise - The exercise of an option
contract before its expiration date.
Ease Off - A
minor and/or slow decline in the prices of a market. ECU - See
European Currency Unit.
Econometrics -
The application of statistical and mathematical methods in the field
of economics to test and quantify economic theories and the
solutions to economic problems.
Efficient Market
- A market in which new information is immediately available gratis
to all investors and potential investors. A market in which all
information is instantaneously assimilated and therefore has no
distortions.
EFP - Exchange
for Physical. See Exchange of Futures for Cash.
Elliot Wave - (1)
A theory named after Ralph Elliot, who contended that the stock
market tends to move in discernible and predictable patterns
reflecting the basic harmony of nature; (2) in technical analysis, a
charting method based on the belief that all prices act as waves
rising and falling rhythmically.
Equilibrium Price
- The market price at which the quantity supplied of a commodity
equals the quantity demanded.
Equity - The
residual dollar value of a futures, option, or leverage trading
account assuming it were liquidated at current prices.
Eurocurrency -
Certificates of Deposit (CDs), bonds, deposits, or any capital
market instrument issued outside of the national boundaries of the
currency in which the instrument is denominated (for example,
Euro-Swiss francs, Euro-Deutsche marks, eurodollars, eurodollar
bonds, or eurodollar CDs).
Eurodollars -
U.S. dollars on deposit with a bank outside the U.S., and
consequently, outside its jurisdiction. The bank could be either a
foreign bank or a subsidiary of a U.S. bank.
Eurodollar Bonds
- Bonds issued in Europe by corporate or government interests
outside the boundary of the national capital market, denominated in
dollars.
Eurodollar CDs -
Dollar-denominated certificates of deposit issued by a bank outside
of the United States, either a foreign bank or U.S. bank subsidiary.
European Currency Unit - The official unit
of account of the European Monetary System. It is a combination or
basket of the currencies from the twelve European Community
countries: the Deutsche mark, French franc, British pound sterling,
Irish pound, Italian lira, Belgian franc, Dutch guilder, Luxembourg
franc, Greek drachma, Spanish peseta, Portuguese escudo, and the
Danish krona.
Even Lot - A unit
of trading in a commodity established by an exchange to which
official price quotations apply. See Round Lot.
Evening Up -
Buying or selling to offset an existing market position. See
Liquidation.
Exchange For Physicals (EFPs)
- A technique where a physical commodity position is traded for a
futures position.
Exchange of Futures for Cash
- A transaction in which the buyer of a cash commodity transfers to
the seller a corresponding amount of long futures contracts, or
receives from the seller a corresponding amount of short futures, at
a price difference mutually agreed upon. In this way the opposite
hedges in futures of both parties are closed out simultaneously.
Also called EFP (Exchange for Physical), AA (Against Actuals) or
Ex-Pit transactions.
Exchange Rate -
The price of one currency stated in terms of another currency.
Exchange Risk Factor
- The delta value of an option as computed daily by the exchange on
which it is traded.
Exercise - The
action taken by the holder of a call option if they wish to purchase
the underlying futures contract, or by the holder of a put option if
they wish to sell the underlying futures contract.
Exercise an
Option
- To enter the futures market at the strike price.
Exercise Price
- See Strike Price.
Exotic Options -
Any of a wide variety of options with non-standard payout
structures, including Asian options and Lookback options mostly
traded in the over-the-counter market.
Expanded Trading Hours
- Additional trading hours of specific futures and options contracts
at the Chicago Board of Trade that overlap with business hours in
other time zones.
Expiration Date -
The date on which an option contract becomes void. At a specified
time on the expiration date, the option can no longer be exercised
or sold. For example, an option on a March futures contract expires
in February but is referred to as a March option because its
exercise would result in a March futures contract position.
Ex-Pit Transactions
- Trades executed, for certain technical purposes, in a location
other than the regular exchange trading pit.
Extrinsic Value -
See Time Value.
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F
Face Value - The amount of money printed
on the face of the certificate of a security; the original dollar
amount of indebtedness incurred.
Federal Funds -
Member bank deposits at the Federal Reserve; these funds are loaned
by member banks to other member banks.
Federal Funds Rate
- The rate of interest charged for the use of federal funds.
Federal Reserve System
- A central banking system in the United States, created by the
Federal Reserve Act in 1913, designed to assist the nation in
attaining its economic and financial goals. The structure of the
Federal Reserve System includes a Board of Governors, the Federal
Open Market Committee, and 12 Federal Reserve Banks.
Feed Ratio - A
ratio used to express the relationship of feeding costs to the
dollar value of livestock. These serve as indicators of the profit
margin or lack of profit in feeding animals to market weight. See
Hog/Corn Ratio and Steer/Corn Ratio.
Fictitious Trading
- Wash trading, bucketing, cross trading, or other schemes which
give the appearance of trading. Actually, no bona fide, competitive
trade has occurred.
Fill or Kill Order
- A customer order that is a price limit order that must be filled
immediately or cancelled.
First Notice Day (FND)
- According to Chicago Board of Trade rules, the first day on which
a notice of intent to deliver a commodity in fulfillment of a given
month's futures contract can be made by the clearinghouse to a
buyer. The clearinghouse also informs the sellers who they have been
matched up with.
Fix, Fixing - See
Gold Fixing.
Floor Broker -
Any person who, in or surrounding any pit, ring, post or other place
provided by a contract market for the meeting of persons similarly
engaged, executes for another person any orders for the purchase or
sale of any commodity for future delivery. This person must be an
exchange member and also trade for his own account under certain
conditions.
Floor Trader - An
exchange member who executes his own trades by being personally
present in the pit or place for futures trading. See Local.
F.O.B. (Free On Board)
- Indicates that all delivery, inspection and elevation or loading
cost involved in putting commodities on board a carrier have been
paid.
Forced Liquidation
- The situation in which a customer's account is liquidated (open
positions are offset) by the brokerage firm holding the account, or,
in the case of leverage accounts, by the leverage transaction
merchant, usually after notification (margin calls), because
the account is undercapitalized.
Force Majeure - A
clause in a supply contract which permits either party not to
fulfill the contractual commitments due to events beyond their
control. These events may range from strikes to export delays in
producing countries.
Foreign Exchange
- A foreign exchange market where foreign currency is bought and
sold for immediate or future delivery.
Forward - In the
future.
Forwardation - See Contango.
Forward Contract
- A cash transaction common in many industries, including commodity
merchandising, in which a commercial buyer and seller agree upon
delivery of a specified quality and quantity of goods at a specified
future date. A price may be agreed upon in advance, or there may be
agreement that the price will be determined at the time of delivery.
Forward Market -
Refers to informal (non-exchange) trading of commodities to be
delivered at a future date. Contracts for forward delivery are
personalized, (i.e., delivery time and amount are as determined
between seller and customer).
Forward Months -
Futures contracts, currently trading, calling for later or distant
delivery. See Deferred Futures.
Forward Purchase or Sale
- A purchase or sale between commercial parties of an actual
commodity for deferred delivery.
Free Crowd System
- A system of trading, common to most U.S. commodity exchanges,
where all floor members may bid and offer simultaneously either for
their own accounts or for the accounts of customers, and
transactions may take place simultaneously at different places in
the trading ring. Also see Board Broker System and Specialist
System.
Frontrunning -
With respect to commodity futures and options, taking a futures or
option position based upon non-public information regarding an
impending transaction by another person in the same or related
future or option.
Full Carrying Charge, Full Carry
- See Carrying Charges.
Fundamental Analysis
- A method of anticipating future price movement using supply and
demand information. See Technical Analysis.
Fungibility - The
characteristic of interchangeability. Futures contracts for the same
commodity and delivery month are fungible due to their standardized
specifications for quality, quantity, delivery date and delivery
locations.
Futures - A term
used to designate all contracts covering the sale of commodities for
future delivery on a commodity exchange. See Futures Contract.
Futures Commission Merchant (FCM)
- An individual or organization that solicits or accepts orders to
buy or sell futures contracts or options on futures and accepts
money or other assets from customers to support such orders. Also
referred to as commission house or wire house.
Futures Contract
- A legally binding agreement to purchase or sell a commodity for
delivery in the future: (1) at a price that is determined at
initiation of the contract; (2) which obligates each party to the
contract to fulfill the contract at the specified price; (3) which
is used to assume or shift price risk; and (4) which may be
satisfied by delivery or offset.
Futures-equivalent
- A term frequently used with reference to speculative position
limits for options on futures contracts. The futures-equivalent of
an option position is the number of options multiplied by the
previous day's risk factor or delta for the option series For
example, 10 deep out-of-the-money options with a risk factor of 0.20
would be considered 2 futures-equivalent contracts. The delta or
risk factor used for this purpose is the same as that used in
delta-based margining and risk analysis systems.
Futures Exchange
- A central marketplace with established rules and regulations where
buyers and sellers meet to trade futures and options on futures
contracts.
Futures Price -
(1) Commonly held to mean the price of a commodity for future
delivery that is traded on a futures exchange. (2) The price of any
futures contract.
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G
Gamma - A measurement of how fast delta
changes, given a unit change of the underlying futures price.
GTC - See Good
Till Cancelled.
Ginzy Trading - A
trade practice in which a floor broker, in executing an
order--particularly a large order, will fill a portion of the order
at one price and the remainder of the order at another price to
avoid an exchange's rule against trading at fractional increments or
"split ticks." In re Murphy, [1984-86 Transfer Binder] Comm. Fut L.
Rep. (CCH) at pp. 31,353-4 (Sept. 25, 1985), the Commission found
that ginzy trading was a noncompetitive trading practice in
violation of Section 4c(a)(B) of the Commodity Exchange Act and CFTC
Regulation 1.38(a).
Give Up - A
contract executed by one broker for the client of another broker
that the client orders to be turned over to the second broker. The
broker accepting the order from the customer collects a wire toll
from the carrying broker for the use of the facilities. Often used
to consolidate many small orders or to disperse large ones.
Globex - An
international after-hours electronic trading system for futures and
options that allows participating exchanges to list their products
for trading after the close of the exchanges' open outcry trading
hours. Developed by Reuters Limited for use by the Chicago
Mercantile Exchange (CME) and the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT),
Globex was launched on June 25, 1992, for certain CME and CBOT
contracts. Various MATIF (Marche a Terme International de France)
contracts are scheduled to begin trading in early 1993, and, at this
writing—August 1992, several New York and European exchanges have
expressed an interest in participating in Globex.
Going Long -
Someone who expects a futures price to increase over a given period
of time can seek to profit by buying futures contracts. The
futures contract can later be sold for the higher price, yielding
profits. Because of leverage, the gain or loss may be greater
than the initial margin deposit.
Going Short -
Someone who expects futures prices to decline. They would sell
futures contracts in the anticipation of lower prices, and the hope
of later being able to buy back identical and offsetting contract at
a lower price, yielding profits. It differs from going long
is in the sequence of the trades. Instead of first buying a
futures contract, you first sell a futures contract. If, as
expected, the price declines, a profit can be realized by later
purchasing an offsetting futures contract at the lower price. The
gain per unit will be the amount by which the purchase price is
below the earlier selling price.
Gold Certificate
- A certificate attesting to a person's ownership of a specific
amount of gold bullion.
Gold Fixing (Gold Fix)
- The setting of the gold price at 10:30 AM (first fixing) and 3:00
PM (second fixing) in London by five representatives of the London
Gold Market. See London Gold Market.
Gold/Silver Ratio
- The number of ounces of silver required to buy one ounce of gold
at current spot prices.
Good This Week Order (GTW)
- Order which is valid only for the week in which it is placed.
Good Till Cancelled Order (GTC)
- Order which is valid at any time during market hours until
executed or cancelled. See Open Order.
Grades - Various
qualities of a commodity.
Grading Certificates
- A formal document setting forth the quality of a commodity as
determined by authorized inspectors or graders.
Grain Futures Act
- Federal statute which regulated trading in grain futures,
effective June 22, 1923; administered by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture; amended in 1936 by the Commodity Exchange Act.
Grain Terminal -
Large grain elevator facility with the capacity to ship grain by
rail and/or barge to domestic or foreign markets.
Grantor - The
maker, writer, or issuer of an option contract who, in return for
the premium paid for the option, stands ready to purchase the
underlying commodity (or futures contract) in the case of a put
option or to sell the underlying commodity (or futures contract) in
the case of a call option.
Gross Domestic Product
- The value of all final goods and services produced by an economy
over a particular time period, normally a year.
Gross National Product
- Gross Domestic Product plus the income accruing to domestic
residents as a result of investments abroad less income earned in
domestic markets accruing to foreigners abroad.
Gross Processing Margin (GPM)
- Refers to the difference between the cost of a commodity and the
combined sales income of the finished products which result from
processing the commodity. Various industries have formulas to
express the relationship of raw material costs to sales income from
finished products. For example, the difference between the
cost of soybeans and the combines dales income of the processed
soybean oil and meal. See Crack and Crush.
GTC - See Good
Till Cancelled Order.
GTW - See Good
This Week Order.
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H
Haircut - (1) In determining whether
assets meet capital requirements, a percentage reduction in the
stated value of assets. (2) In computing the worth of assets
deposited as collateral or margin, a reduction from market value.
Hardening - (1)
Describes a price which is gradually stabilizing; (2) a term
indicating a slowly advancing market.
Heavy - A market
in which prices are demonstrating either an inability to advance or
a slight tendency to decline.
Hedge - A
position in a commodity for which there is an offsetting position.
Hedge Ratio -
Ratio of the value of futures contracts purchased or sold to the
value of the cash commodity being hedged, a computation necessary to
minimize basis risk.
Hedger - An
individual or company owning or planning to own a cash commodity
(corn, soybeans, wheat, U.S. Treasury bonds, notes, bills, etc.) and
concerned that the cost of the commodity may change before either
buying or selling it in the cash market. A hedger achieves
protection against changing cash prices by purchasing (selling)
futures contracts of the same or similar commodity and later
offsetting that position by selling (purchasing) futures contracts
of the same quality and type as the initial transaction.
Hedging - Taking
a position in a futures market opposite to a position held in the
cash market to minimize the risk of financial loss from an adverse
price change; a purchase or sale of futures as a temporary
substitute for a cash transaction that will occur later. Someone
that make purchases and sales in the futures market solely
for the purpose of establishing a known price level – weeks or
months in advance – for something they later intend to buy or sell
in the cash market (such as at a grain elevator or in the
bond market). Hedgers willingly give up the opportunity to benefit
from favorable price changes in order to achieve protection
against unfavorable price changes. For example, an option
purchased opposite a position in the futures market.
High - The
highest price of the day for a particular futures contract.
Hog/Corn Ratio -
The relationship of feeding costs to the dollar value of hogs. It is
measured by dividing the price of hogs ($/hundredweight) by the
price of corn ($/bushel). When corn prices are high relative to pork
prices, fewer units of corn equal the dollar value of 100 pounds of
pork. Conversely, when corn prices are low in relation to pork
prices, more units of corn are required to equal the value of 100
pounds of pork. See Feed Ratio.
Holder - An
individual who pays the option seller a premium for the right to buy
(in the case of a call) or sell (in the case of a put) the
underlying instrument at the specified strike price on or before the
expiration date. See Option Buyer.
Horizontal Spread
- The purchase of either a call or put option and the simultaneous
sale of the same type of option with typically the same strike price
but with a different expiration month. Also referred to as a
calendar spread.
Hybrid Instruments
- Financial instruments that possess, in varying combinations,
characteristics of forward contracts, futures contracts, option
contracts, debt instruments, bank depository interests, and other
interests. Certain hybrid instruments are exempt from CFTC
regulation. See Commission Rule 34.1(b).
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I
Index Arbitrage
- The simultaneous purchase (sale) of stock index futures and the
sale (purchase) of some or all of the component stocks which make up
the particular stock index to profit from sufficiently large
inter-market spreads between the futures contract and the index
itself.
Initial Margin -
Customers' funds put up as security for a guarantee of contract
fulfillment at the time a futures market position is established.
See Original Margin.
In Sight - The
amount of a particular commodity that arrives at terminal or central
locations in or near producing areas. When a commodity is in
sight, it is inferred that reasonably prompt delivery can be
made; the quantity and quality also become known factors, rather
than estimates.
Intercommodity Spread
- The purchase of a given delivery month of one futures market and
the simultaneous sale of the same delivery month of a different, but
related, futures market. See Spread.
Interdelivery Spread - The
purchase of one delivery month of a given futures contract and
simultaneous sale of another delivery month of the same commodity on
the same exchange. See Spread.
Interest Arbitrage
- The process where foreign debt instruments are purchased to profit
from the higher interest rate in the foreign country over the home
country. The operation is profitable only when the forward rate on
the foreign currency is selling at a discount less than the premium
on the interest rate. See Interest Rate Parity.
Interest Rate Futures
- Futures contracts traded on fixed income securities such as U.S.
Treasury issues or CDs. Currency is excluded from this category,
even though interest rates are a factor in currency values.
Interest Rate Parity
- The formal theory of interest rate parity holds that under normal
conditions the forward premium or discount on a currency in terms of
another is directly related to the interest differential between the
two countries. For example, the forward rate discount (or premium)
on Swiss Francs in terms of dollars would equal the premium (or
discount) of interest rates in Switzerland over (or under) those in
the U.S. This theory holds only when there are unrestricted flows of
international short-term capital. In reality, numerous economic and
legal obstacles restrict the movement, so that actual parity is
rare. See Interest Arbitrage.
Intermarket Spread
- The sale of a given delivery month of a futures contract on one
exchange and the simultaneous purchase of the same delivery month
and futures contract on another exchange.
Internal Financing
- Using the profit from one contract to finance the margin on
another.
In-The-Money Option
- Describes an option with intrinsic (positive) value if exercised.
A call option is in-the-money if its strike price is below the
current price of the underlying futures contract. A put option is
in-the-money if its strike price is above the current price of the
underlying futures contract. See Intrinsic Value.
Intrinsic Value -
The amount by which an option is in-the-money.
Introducing Broker (IB)
- A person or organization that solicits or accepts orders to buy or
sell futures contracts or commodity options but does not accept
money or other assets from customers to support such orders.
Inverted Market -
A futures market in which the relationship between two delivery
months of the same commodity is abnormal. That is, the nearer months
are selling at prices higher than the more distant months; a market
displaying inverse carrying charges, characteristic of
markets with supply shortages. See Backwardation.
Invisible Supply
- Uncounted stocks of a commodity in the hands of wholesalers,
manufacturers and producers which cannot be identified accurately;
stocks outside commercial channels but theoretically
available to the market.
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J
Job Lot - A form of contract having a
smaller unit of trading than is featured in a regular contract.
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K
Kerb Trading or Dealing - See Curb
Trading.
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L
Lagging Indicators - Market indicators
showing the general direction of the economy confirming or denying
the trend implied by the leading indicators.
Large Order Execution (LOX) Procedures
- Rules in place at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange that authorize a
member firm which receives a large order from an initiating party to
solicit counterparty interest off the exchange floor prior to open
execution of the order in the pit and that provide for special
surveillance procedures. The parties determine a maximum quantity
and an "intended execution price." Subsequently, the initiating
party's order quantity is exposed to the pit; any bids (or offers)
up to and including those at the intended execution price are hit
(accepted). The unexecuted balance is then crossed with the
contra-side trader found by the LOX procedures.
Large Traders - A
large trader is one who holds or controls a position in any one
future or in any one option expiration series of a commodity on any
one contract market equaling or exceeding the exchange or CFTC-specified
reporting level.
Last Notice Day -
The final day on which notices of intent to deliver on futures
contracts may be issued.
Last Trading Day (LTD)
- According to the Chicago Board of Trade rules, the final day when
trading may occur in a given futures or option contract month.
Futures contracts outstanding at the end of the last trading day
must be settled by delivery of the underlying commodity or
securities or by agreement for monetary settlement.
Leading Indicators
- Market indicators that signal the state of the economy for the
coming months. Some of the leading indicators include: average
manufacturing workweek, initial claims for unemployment insurance,
orders for consumer goods and material, percentage of companies
reporting slower deliveries, change in manufacturers' unfilled
orders for durable goods, plant and equipment orders, new building
permits, index of consumer expectations, change in material prices,
prices of stocks, change in money supply.
Leaps -
Long-dated, exchange-traded options.
Leverage - The
ability to control large dollar amounts of a commodity with a
comparatively small amount of capital. See margin.
Leverage Contract
- A contract, standardized as to terms and conditions, for the
long-term (ten years or longer) purchase (long leverage contract) or
sale (short leverage contract) by a leverage customer of a leverage
commodity which provides for: (1) participation by the leverage
transaction merchant as a principal in each leverage transaction;
(2) initial and maintenance margin payments by the leverage
customer; (3) periodic payment by the leverage customer or accrual
by the leverage transaction merchant to the leverage customer of a
variable carrying charge or fee on the initial value of the contract
plus any margin deposits made by the leverage customer in connection
with a short leverage contract; (4) delivery of a commodity in an
amount and form which can be readily purchased and sold in normal
commercial or retail channels; (5) delivery of the leverage
commodity after satisfaction of the balance due on the contract; and
(6) determination of the contract purchase and repurchase, or sale
and resale, prices by the leverage transaction merchant.
Life of Contract
- Period between beginning of trading a particular futures contract
and the expiration of trading. In some cases this phrase denotes the
period already passed in which trading has already occurred. For
example, The life-of-contract high so far is $2.50. Same as
Life of Delivery or Life of the Future.
Limit (Up or Down)
- The maximum price advance or decline from the previous day's
settlement price permitted during one trading session, as fixed by
the rules of an exchange. See Daily Price Limits.
Limits - Stated
in terms of the previous day's closing price plus and minus so many
cents or dollars per trading unit. Once a futures price has
increased by its daily limit, there can be no trading at any higher
price until the next day of trading. Conversely, once a
futures price has declined by its daily limit, there can be no
trading at any lower price until the next day of trading. For
some contracts, daily price limits are eliminated during the month
in which the contract expires. Because prices can become
particularly volatile during the expiration month (also called the
delivery or spot month), persons lacking experience in
futures trading may wish to liquidate their positions prior to that
time. Because of daily price limits, there may be occasions when it
is not possible to liquidate an existing futures position at will.
Limit Move - A
price that has advanced or declined the permissible limit during one
trading session, as fixed by the rules of a contract market.
Limit Only - The
definite price stated by a customer to a broker restricting the
execution of an order to buy for not more than, or to sell for not
less than, the stated price.
Limit Order - An
order to buy or sell a futures contract at the specific price you
state (or better), as contrasted with a market order which implies
that the order should be filled as soon as possible.
Liquid - A
characteristic of a security or commodity market with enough units
outstanding to allow large transactions without substantial change
in price. Institutional investors are inclined to seek out liquid
investments so that their trading activity will not influence the
market price.
Liquidate -
Selling (or purchasing) futures contracts of the same delivery month
purchased (or sold) during an earlier transaction or making (or
taking) delivery of the cash commodity represented by the futures
contract. See Offset.
Liquidation - The
closing out of a long position. The term is sometimes used to denote
closing out a short position, but this is more often referred to as
covering. See Cover.
Liquidity - How
easy it is to get out/in a market at a reasonable price close to
your specified exit/entry price. Two useful indicators of liquidity
are volume of trading and Open Interest (the number of
traders willing to buy and sell).
Liquid Market - A
market in which selling and buying can be accomplished with minimal
price change.
Local - A member
of a U.S. exchange who trades for his own account and/or fills
orders for customers and whose activities provide market liquidity.
See Floor Trader.
Locked-In - A
hedged position that cannot be lifted without offsetting both sides
of the hedge spread). See Hedging. Also refers to being caught in a
limit price move.
Lock Limit - The
event when prices have risen or fallen by the maximum daily limit,
and there is presently no trading in the contract. It may not be
possible to execute your order at any price. A market may be
lock limit for more than one day, resulting in substantial losses to
you when you find it impossible to liquidate losing futures
positions.
London Gold Market
- Refers to the five dealers who set (fix) the gold price in London:
Mocatta & Goldsmid, N. Rothschild & Sons, Johnson Matthey, Sharps
Pixley, and Samuel Montagu & Co.
London Option - A
generic term sometimes used to describe options on physical
commodities or on futures contracts traded abroad (typified by
options on London commodity markets). These options, which often had
nothing whatsoever to do with legitimate foreign markets, gained
notoriety--prior to their ban in the United States in 1978--because
of the sales practices and fraud allegations associated with the
American dealers who sold them.
Long - (1) A
market position which has been established through the purchase of
an option or future and for which no offsetting sale has been made;
(2) a market position which obligates the holder to take delivery;
(3) one who owns an inventory of commodities. See Short.
Long Hedge -
Purchase of futures against the fixed price forward sale of a cash
commodity. See Purchasing Hedge.
Long the Basis -
A person or firm that has bought the spot commodity and hedged with
a sale of futures is said to be long the basis.
Lookback Option -
An option whose payoff depends on the minimum or maximum price of
the underlying asset during some portion of the life of the option.
Lot - A unit of
trading. See Even Lot, Job Lot, and Round Lot.
Low - The lowest
price of the day for a particular futures contract.
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M
Maintenance - A set minimum margin (per
outstanding futures contract) that a customer must maintain in his
margin (trading) account.
Maintenance Margin
- A sum usually smaller than, but part of, the original margin
(security deposit) that must be maintained on deposit at all times.
If customer equity in any futures position drops to or under the
maintenance margin level, the broker must issue a call for the
amount of money required to restore the customer's equity in the
account back to the original margin level. See Margin.
Managed Account -
See Controlled Account, Discretionary Account.
Managed Futures -
Represents an industry comprised of professional money managers
known as commodity trading advisors who manage client assets on a
discretionary basis, using global futures markets as an investment
medium.
Margin - The
amount of money or collateral deposited by a customer with his
broker, by a broker with a clearing member, or by a clearing member
with the clearinghouse, for the purpose of insuring the broker or
clearinghouse against loss on open futures contracts. The margin is
not partial payment or a purchase. (1) Initial margin is the total
amount of margin per contract required by the broker when a futures
position is opened; (2) Maintenance margin is a sum which must be
maintained on deposit at all times. If the equity in a customer's
account drops to, or under, the level because of adverse price
movement, the broker must issue a margin call to restore the
customer's equity.
Monetary deposit to
buy/sell a futures contract. Leverages your resources. Small deposit
amount purchases large commodity value. The smaller the margin in
relation to the value of the futures contract, the greater the
leverage. The high leverage can produce large profits in relation to
your initial margin. Conversely, if prices move in the opposite
direction, high leverage can produce large losses in relation
to your initial margin. You must clearly understand the concept of
leverage as well as the amount of gain or loss that will result from
any given change in the futures price of the particular futures
contract you would be trading.
The margin required to buy or sell a futures contract is solely a
deposit of good faith money that can be drawn on by your brokerage
firm to cover losses that you may incur in the course of futures
trading. It is like money held in an escrow account. Margins are
typically 5% of the current value of the futures contract.
There are two types of margins: Initial margin and
maintenance margin.
Initial
margin (sometimes called original margin) is
the sum of money that the customer must deposit with the brokerage
firm for each futures contract to be bought or sold. When profits
accrue on your open positions, the profits are added to the balance
in your margin account. When losses accrue, the losses are
deducted from the balance in your margin account.
If and when the funds
remaining available in your margin account are reduced by losses to
below a certain level - known as the maintenance margin
requirement - your broker will require that you deposit additional
funds to bring the account back to the level of the initial margin.
See Clearing Margin, Customer Margin.
Margin Call - A demand by the brokerage
firm for additional funds to bring margin deposits up to a required
minimum level, because of adverse price movement. You will be
required to keep an amount equal to the maintenance margins in your
open account. If you are unable to do so, your position will be
liquidated.
Market Correction
- In technical analysis, a small reversal in prices following a
significant trending period.
Market-If-Touched (MIT) Order
- An order that becomes a market order when a particular price is
reached. A sell MIT is placed above the market; a buy MIT is placed
below the market. Also referred to as a board order.
Market-on-Close -
An order to buy or sell at the end of the trading session at a price
within the closing range of prices. See Stop-Close-Only Order.
Market-on-Opening
- An order to buy or sell at the beginning of the trading session at
a price within the opening range of prices.
Market Order - An
order to buy or sell a futures contract or option at the prevailing
market price when the order reaches the floor of the exchange.
Considered a day order. See At-The-Market.
Mark-to-Market -
Daily cash flow system used by U.S. futures exchanges to maintain a
minimum level of margin equity for a given futures or option
contract position by calculating the gain or loss in each contract
position resulting from changes in the price of the futures or
option contracts at the end of each trading day.
Maturity - Period
within which a futures contract can be settled by delivery of the
actual commodity.
Maximum Price Fluctuation
- See Tick, Limit Up, Limit Down.
Minimum Price Contract - A hybrid
commercial forward contract for agricultural products which includes
a provision guaranteeing the person making delivery a minimum price
for the product. For agricultural commodities, these contracts
became much more common with the introduction of exchange-traded
options on futures contracts, which permit buyers to hedge the price
risks associated with such contracts.
Minimum Price Fluctuations
- Smallest increment of price movement possible in trading a given
contract.
Momentum - In technical analysis, the
relative change in price over a specific time interval. Often
equated with speed or velocity and considered in terms of relative
strength.
Money Market -
Short-term debt instruments.
Money Supply -
The amount of money in the economy, consisting primarily of currency
in circulation plus deposits in banks. M1 U.S. money supply
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