Futures 101 - Chapter 4: What is a Futures Contract?

Article Index
Futures 101
Chapter 2: Futures Markets What, Why And Who
Chapter 3: The Market Participants
Chapter 4: What is a Futures Contract?
Chapter 5: The Process of Price Discovery
Chapter 6: Gains and Losses on Futures Contracts
Chapter 7: The Arithmetic of Futures Trading and Leverage
Chapter 8: Margins
Chapter 9: Basic Trading Strategies
Chapter 10: Position Limits
Chapter 11: Minimum Price Changes
Chapter 12: Regulation of Futures Trading
Chapter 13: Establishing an Account
Chapter 14: What to Look For in a Futures Contract
Chapter 15: The Contract Unit
Chapter 16: How Prices Are Quoted
Chapter 17: Minimum Price Changes
Chapter 18: Daily Price Limits
Chapter 19: Position Limits
Chapter 20: Understanding (and managing) the Risks of Futures Trading
Chapter 21: Choosing a Futures Contract
Chapter 22: Liquidity
Chapter 23: Stop Orders
Chapter 24: Spreads
Chapter 25: Options on Futures Contracts
Chapter 26: Buying Call Options
Chapter 27: Buying Put Options
Chapter 28: How Option Premiums are Determined
Chapter 29: Selling Options
Chapter 30: In Closing
All Pages

Introduction to Futures Trading 101
Published By: National Futures Association

There are two types of futures contracts, those that provide for physical delivery of a particu-lar commodity and those that call for an eventual cash settlement. The commodity itself is specifically defined, as is the month when delivery or settlement is to occur. A July futures contract, for example, provides for delivery or settlement in July.

It should be noted that even in the case of delivery-type futures contracts, very few actually result in delivery. Not many speculators want to take or make delivery of 5,000 bushels of grain or 40,000 pounds of pork. Rather, the vast majority of both speculators and hedgers choose to realize their gains or losses by buying or selling an offsetting futures contract prior to the delivery date.

Selling a contract that was previously pur-chased liquidates a futures position in exactly the same way that selling 100 shares of IBM stock liquidates an earlier purchase of 100 shares of IBM stock. Similarly, a futures con-tract that was initially sold can be liquidated by making an offsetting purchase. In either case, profit or loss is the difference between the buying price and the selling price, less transaction expenses.

Cash settlement futures contracts are precisely that, contracts that are settled in cash rather than by delivery at the time the contract ex-pires. Stock index futures contracts, for ex-ample, are settled in cash on the basis of the index number at the close of the final day of trading. Delivery of the actual shares of stock that comprise the index would obviously be impractical.