|
Intro to Commodities - Part
II
Let's examine a highly simplified commodities future contract
trade.
Suppose a trader buys a contract to purchase oil trading on
NYMEX (The New York Mercantile Exchange) at $70 per barrel for
WTI with an expiration date of August 6th. (Oil comes,
obviously, from a variety of major sources, including the North
Sea near England, Alaska, Saudi Arabia, West Texas, etc. The
locations often lend their names to the different sub-types of
commodity and generally have different prices).
Note a number of things about this contract, called a
future.
It names a specific commodity. It isn't a contract for North
Sea Brent, it's for WTI (West Texas Intermediate) Crude. Though
oil as a whole is a commodity with similar properties, the
actual material recovered varies from place to place. There are
as many types and names as there are for cigars.
Because of differences in cost of production, refining and
shipping costs, inherent composition and many other factors not
least of which is expected demand, prices can and do vary.
It has a specified price: $70 per barrel. A portion of that
money, called the margin, is to be paid today. The required
margin amount changes depending on a number of factors, such as
how volatile prices have been in the recent past. But somewhere
around 5% is typical.
Each contract specifies a set amount, typically 1,000 U.S.
barrels (42,000 gallons, equivalent to roughly 168,000 liters).
At 5% of $70 per barrel, a contract for a 1,000 barrels
requires a minimum investment of $3.50 x 1,000 = $3,500.
For an investment of $3,500 the speculator is controlling
$70,000 worth of oil. That's known as leverage.
The contract has an expiration date and an associated
obligation for delivery. On or before August 6th the contract
holder has to deliver 1,000 barrels of West Texas Intermediate
Crude with specified characteristics. Exchanges determine such
things as minimum acceptable levels of sulfur content, for
example.
The vast majority of traders are never going to see a drop of
that oil and don't have any real expectation of delivering it.
They don't have it to deliver. They are trading contracts for
goods, not the goods themselves. The final contract is
ultimately handled by a specialist broker who ensures delivery
of the actual product to some 'consumer' like an oil
refinery.
The important point for the average trader is simply that they
have to do something by a given date. That has interesting
consequences, such as the change in price for the contract
itself as the expiration date nears.
Unlike an options contract, a futures contract carries not only
the right to buy or sell something at a given price by a
specified date, but the obligation to do so.
If the spot price (the price of a barrel of oil at a given
time, in a specific market) changes, the trading price for the
contract will change as well. How it changes, and by how much,
we have to leave for later. But suppose the price for WTI rises
to $75 per barrel before expiration.
How much profit, in percentage terms has the trader made?
$75 - $70 = $5 per barrel. $5 per barrel x 1,000 barrels =
$5,000. $5,000 - $3,500 = $1,500 (excluding commissions).
$1,500 / $3,500 x 100% = 42.86%.
A very healthy return and, in today's oil market, not at all
unrealistic. Of course, anyone considering commodities trading
should be fully alert to the possibility - even in today's
market - that the price of oil (or any other commodity) can and
does fall as well as rise.
|