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A Futures Contract represents a standardized legal agreement to buy or sell a specific asset at a predetermined price on a specified future date. Futures contracts are traded on regulated exchanges and are commonly used for hedging risk or speculative purposes.
Definition
Futures Contract is an exchange-traded derivative agreement that obligates the buyer to purchase, and the seller to deliver, an asset at a fixed price on a future date.
Futures contracts are widely used across commodities, financial instruments, and currencies. Unlike forward contracts, futures are standardized in terms of contract size, delivery dates, and quality specifications, and they trade on organized exchanges such as the CME or ICE.
Participants post margin to enter positions, and gains or losses are settled daily through the exchange’s clearinghouse. This structure greatly reduces default risk compared to over-the-counter derivatives.
Common users include producers and consumers hedging price risk (e.g., farmers, airlines) and traders seeking profit from price volatility.
Futures Price (Cost-of-Carry Model):
Futures Price = Spot Price × (1 + Risk-Free Rate + Storage Costs − Convenience Yield) ^ Time
Margin Requirement:
Initial Margin + Variation Margin = Total Margin Posted
A wheat farmer sells wheat futures to lock in a selling price ahead of harvest, protecting against falling prices. At the same time, a food manufacturer buys futures to secure predictable input costs.
Futures contracts contribute to:
They play a critical role in global trade and financial market infrastructure.
Commodity Futures: Agriculture, energy, metals.
Financial Futures: Interest rates, equity indices.
Currency Futures: Exchange-traded FX contracts.
Cash-Settled Futures: No physical delivery; settled in cash.
Yes. Leverage and price volatility can amplify gains and losses.
Many contracts are closed before expiration; some are cash-settled.
In the U.S., futures are regulated by the CFTC.