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| | Glossary of Futures
& Options Terms
This glossary has been compiled by Futures Technology
and from a number of sources. The definitions are not intended to
state or suggest the correct legal significance or meaning of any
word or phrase. The sole purpose of this compilation is to foster
a better understanding of futures and options on futures.
- Arbitrage
- The simultaneous purchase and sale of identical
or equivalent financial instruments or commodity futures
in order to benefit from a discrepancy in their price
relationship.
- Back Months
- The futures or options on futures months being
traded that are furthest from expiration.
- Bear
- One who believes prices will move lower.
- Bear Market
- A market in which prices are declining.
- Bid
- The price that the market participants are
willing to pay. See offer.
- Bull
- One who expects prices to rise.
- Bull Market
- A market in which prices are rising.
- Buy On Close
- To buy at the end of a trading session at a price
within the closing range.
- Buy On Opening
- To buy at the beginning of a trading session at a
price within the opening range.
- Cabinet Trade or cab
- A trade that allows options traders to liquidate
deep out-of-the-money options by trading the option at a
price equal to one-half tick.
- Call
- An option to buy a commodity, security or futures
contract at a specified price anytime between now and the
expiration date of the option contract.
- Cash Commodity
- The actual physical commodity as distinguished
from a futures commodity.
- Close, The
- The period at the end of the trading session.
Sometimes used to refer to the closing range. (See opening, the.)
- Closing Range (or
Range)
- The high and low prices, or bids and offers,
recorded during the period designated as the official
close. (See settlement
price.)
- Commission (or Round Turn)
- The one-time fee charged by a broker to a
customer when a futures or options on futures position is
liquidated either by offset or delivery.
- CFTC
- CFTC - The Commodity Futures Trading Commission
as created by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
Act of 1974. This government agency currently regulates
the nation's commodity futures industry.
- Contract
- Unit of trading for a financial or commodity
future. Also, actual bilateral agreement between the
parties (buyer and seller) of a futures or options on
futures transaction as defined by an exchange.
- Contract Month
- The month in which futures contracts may be
satisfied by making or accepting delivery. (See delivery
month.)
- Day Order
- An order that is placed for execution during only
one trading session. If the order cannot be executed that
day, it is automatically cancelled.
- Day Trading
- Refers to establishing and liquidating the same
position or positions within one day's trading, thus
ending the day with no established position in the
market.
- Deferred
- Another term for "back months."
- Delivery
- The tender and receipt of an actual commodity or
financial instrument, or cash in settlement of a futures
contract.
- Exercise Or Strike Price
- The price at which the holder (buyer) may
purchase or sell the underlying futures contract upon the
exercise of an option.
- Expiration Date
- The last day that an option may be exercised into
the underlying futures contract. Also, the last day of
trading for a futures contract.
- Floor Broker
- An exchange member who is paid a fee for
executing orders for Clearing Members or their customers.
A Floor Broker executing orders must be licensed by the
CFTC.
- Floor Trader
- An exchange member who generally trades only for
his/her own account or for an account controlled by
him/her. Also referred to as a "local."
- Futures
- A term used to designate all contracts covering
the purchase and sale of financial instruments or
physical commodities for future delivery on a commodity
futures exchange.
- Futures Commission
Merchant (FCM)
- A firm or person engaged in soliciting or
accepting and handling orders for the purchase or sale of
futures contracts, subject to the rules of a futures
exchange and, who, in connection with solicitation or
acceptance of orders, accepts any money or securities to
margin any resulting trades or contracts. The FCM must be
licensed by the CFTC.
- Hedge
- The purchase or sale of a futures contract as a
temporary substitute for a cash market transaction to be
made at a later date. Usually it involves opposite
positions in the cash market and futures market at the
same time. (See long
hedge, short
hedge.)
- Holder
- One who purchases an option.
- Initial Performance Bond
- The funds required when a futures position (or a
short options on futures position) is opened. (Previously
referred to as Initial Margin)
- Limit Order
- An order given to a broker by a customer that
specifies a price; the order can be executed only if the
market reaches or betters that price.
- Limit Price
- (See maximum
price fluctuation.)
- Liquidation
- Any transaction that offsets or closes out a long
or short futures position.
- Long
- One who has bought a futures or options on
futures contract to establish a market position through
an offsetting sale; the opposite of short.
- Long Hedge
- The purchase of a futures contract in
anticipation of an actual purchase in the cash market.
Used by processors or exporters as protection against and
advance in the cash price. (See hedge,
short hedge.)
- Margin
- (See Performance Bond)
- Maintenance Performance Bond (Previously referred to a Maintenance
Margin)
- A sum, usually smaller than--but part of--the
initial performance bond, which must be maintained on
deposit in the customer's account at all times. If a
customer's equity in any futures position drops to, or
under, the maintenance performance bond level, a
"performance bond call" is issued for the
amount of money required to restore the customer's equity
in the account to the initial margin level.
- Mark-To-Market
- The daily adjustment of margin accounts to
reflect profits and losses.
- Market Order
- An order for immediate execution given to a
broker to buy or sell at the best obtainable price.
- Maximum Price
Fluctuation
- The maximum amount the contract price can change,
up or down, during one trading session, as stipulated by
Exchange rules.
- Minimum Price
Fluctuation
- Smallest increment of price movement possible in
trading a given contract, often referred to as a "tick."
- M.I.T.
- Market-If-Touched. A price order that
automatically becomes a market order if the price is
reached.
- Nearby
- The nearest active trading month of a futures or
options on futures contract. Also referred to as
"lead month."
- Offer
- Indicates a willingness to sell a futures
contract at a given price. (See bid.)
- Offset
- Selling if one has bought, or buying if one has
sold, a futures or options on futures contract.
- Open Interest
- Total number of futures or options on futures
contracts that have not yet been offset or fulfilled by
delivery. An indicator of the depth or liquidity of a
market (the ability to buy or sell at or near a given
price) and of the use of a market for risk- and/or
asset-management.
- Open Order
- An order to a broker that is good until it is
canceled or executed.
- Opening, The
- The period at the beginning of the trading
session during which all transactions are considered made
or first transactions were completed.
- Opening Price (Or Range)
- The range of prices at which the first bids and
offers were made or first transactions were completed.
- Option
- A contract giving the holder
the right, but not the obligation, hence,
"option," to buy (call
option) or sell (put
option) a futures contract in a given commodity at a
specified price at any time between now and the
expiration of the option contract.
- Out-Trades
- A situation that results when there is some
confusion or error on a trade. A difference in pricing,
with both traders thinking they were buying, for example,
is a reason why an out-trade may occur.
- Position
- An interest in the market, either long or short,
in the form of open contracts. (See open interest.)
- Performance Bond (Previously referred to as Margin)
- Funds that must be deposited as a performance
bond by a customer with his or her broker, by a broker
with a clearing member, or by a clearing member, with the
Clearing House. The performance bond helps to ensure the
financial integrity of brokers, clearing members and the
Exchange as a whole.
- Performance Bond Call (previously
referred to as Margin Call)
- A demand for additional funds because of adverse
price movement.
- Premium
- 1.) The excess of one futures contract price over
that of another, or over the cash market price. 2.) The
amount agreed upon between the purchaser and seller for
the purchase or sale of a futures option -- purchasers
pay the premium and sellers (writers) receive the
premium.
- Put
- An option to sell a commodity, security, or
futures contract at a specified price at any time between
now and the expiration of the option contract.
- Rally
- An upward movement of prices following a decline;
the opposite of a reaction.
- Range
- The high and low prices or high and low bids and
offers, recorded during a specified time.
- Reaction
- A decline in prices following an advance. The
opposite of rally.
- Registered Representative
- A person employed by, and soliciting business
for, a commission house or Futures
Commission Merchant.
- Round-Turn
- Procedure by which a long or short position is
offset by an opposite transaction or by accepting or
making delivery of the actual financial instrument or
physical commodity.
- Scalp
- To trade for small gains. Scalping normally
involves establishing and liquidating a position quickly,
usually within the same day, hour or even just a few
minutes.
- Settlement Price
- A figure determined by the closing range that is
used to calculate gains and losses in futures market
accounts. Settlement prices are used to determine gains,
losses, margin calls, and invoice prices for deliveries.
(See closing range.)
- Short
- One who has sold a futures contract to establish
a market position and who has not yet closed out this
position through an offsetting purchase; the opposite of long.
- Short Hedge
- The sale of a futures contract in anticipation of
a later cash market sale. Used to eliminate or lessen the
possible decline in value of ownership of an
approximately equal amount of the cash financial
instrument or physical commodity. (See hedge, long hedge.)
- Speculator
- One who attempts to anticipate price changes and,
through buying and selling futures contracts, aims to
make profits; does not use the futures market in
connection with the production, processing, marketing or
handling of a product. The speculator has no interest in
making or taking delivery.
- Spread
- The simultaneous purchase and sale of futures
contracts for the same commodity or instrument for
delivery in different months, or in different but related
markets. A spreader is not concerned with the direction
in which the market moves, but only with the difference
between the prices of each contract.
- Stop Order (Or Stop)
- An order to buy or sell at the market when and if
a specified price is reached.
- Tick
- Refers to a change in price, either up or down.
(See minimum price
fluctuation.)
- Trend
- The general direction of the market.
- Volume
- The number of transactions in a futures or
options on futures contract made during a specified
period of time.
- Writer
- An individual who sells an option.

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The Rules
and Regulations of the different Commodity Exchange should be consulted as the
authoritative source for information, rules and contract specifications.
PLEASE NOTE THAT THERE IS AN INHERENT RISK OF LOSS ASSOCIATED WITH TRADING
FUTURES AND OPTIONS CONTRACTS. EMPLOYEES OF FUTURES TECHNOLOGY, LLC PROVIDE
INFORMATION BASED ON SOURCES WE CONSIDER RELIABLE, BUT THERE IS NO GUARANTEE
THAT THE INFORMATION WE PROVIDE WILL RESULT IN PROFITABLE TRADES. PLEASE
CAREFULLY CONSIDER YOUR FINANCIAL CONDITION BEFORE INVESTING IN FUTURES AND
OPTIONS CONTRACTS. FUTURES TRADING IS NOT SUITABLE FOR ALL INVESTORS.
PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT NECESSARY INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS.
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Maintained by Jerry Hodges
Copyright © Futures Technology 2008, All rights
reserved.
Revised: 22 February, 2008
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