Futures 101 - Chapter 5: The Process of Price Discovery

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

Futures prices increase or decrease largely because of the myriad factors that influence buyers’ and sellers’ expectations about what a particular commodity will be worth at a given time in the future (anywhere from less than a month to more than two years).

As new supply and demand developments occur and as more current information becomes available, these judgments are reassessed and the price of a particular futures contract may be bid upward or downward. This process of reassessment of price discovery is continuous.

On any given day the price of a July futures contract will reflect the consensus of buyers’ and sellers’ current opinions about what the value of the commodity will be when the con-tract expires in July. As new or more accurate information becomes available or as expectations change, the July futures price may in-crease or decrease.

Competitive price discovery is a major economic function—and, indeed, a major economic benefit—of futures trading. Through this competition all available information about the future value of a commodity is con-tinuously translated into the language of price, providing a dynamic barometer of supply and demand. Price "transparency" assures that everyone has access to the same information at the same time.