Todays current
futures market is quite unlike the futures of the 19th century. Todays
future market is a worldwide one that includes manufactured goods,
financial currencies and treasury bonds, and agricultural products.
When you speculate on futures it is not the actual good that is
speculated upon rather it is the contract for the goods that is traded
as value. Every futures contract includes a buyer and a seller. The
following is an example of a futures speculation: A farmer agrees to
deliver 1000 bushels of corn to a baker at a price of $5.00 a bushel. If
the daily price of corn futures falls to $4.00 a bushel, the farmer's
account is credited with $1000 ($5.00 — $4.00 X 1000 bushels) and the
baker's account is debited by the same amount. Futures accounts are
settled every day.
Using the above as an example this is how the contract
settlement would play out: If the price of corn futures is still at
$4.00 the farmer will have made $1000 on the futures contract and the
baker will have lost an equal amount. However, the baker can now
purchase corn on the open market at $4.00 a bushel — $1000 less than the
original contract, so the amount he lost on the futures contract is
made up by the cheaper cost of corn. Also, the farmer must sell his corn
on the open market for $4.00 a bushel, less than what he anticipated
when entering the futures contract, but the profit generated by the
futures contract makes up the difference.
Speculators profit by daily fluctuations in the futures market
by choosing to buy from the seller (buying short) or from the buyer
(buying long).
The FOREX market has advantages over the futures market. FOREX
is the largest financial market in the world. It is a liquid market and
stop orders can be executed more easily and with less slippage than in
other markets. The FOREX market is open 5 days a week, 24 hours a day.
Traders can take advantages of opportunities as they become available.
FOREX transactions are usually instantly executed. FOREX transactions
are commission free. Brokers earn money on the spread.
Some investors feel that due to built in safeguards that FOREX trading is safer than futures trading.
by Jeff Slokum
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