Futures Terminology

sunandaC

New member
Futures Terminology

• Spot price: The price at which an asset trades in the spot market.


• Futures price: The price at which the futures contract trades in the futures market.


• Contract cycle: The period over which a contract trades. The index futures contracts on the NSE have one-month, two-months and three-months expiry cycles, which expire on the last Thursday of the month. Thus a January expiration contract expires on the last Thursday of January and a February expiration contract ceases trading on the last Thursday of February. On the Friday following the last Thursday, a new contract having a three-month expiry is introduced for trading.


• Expiry date: It is the date specified in the futures contract. This is the last day on which the contract will be traded, at the end of which it will cease to exist.


• Contract size: The amount of asset that has to be delivered under one contract. For in-stance, the contract size on NSE’s futures market is 200 Nifties.


• Basis: In the context of financial futures, basis can be defined as the futures price minus the spot price. There will be a different basis for each delivery month for each contract. In a normal market, basis will be positive. This reflects that futures prices normally exceed spot prices.


• Cost of carry: The relationship between futures prices and spot prices can be summarized in terms of what is known as the cost of carry. This measures the storage cost plus the interest that is paid to finance the asset less the income earned on the asset.


• Initial margin: The amount that must be deposited in the margin account at the time a futures contract is first entered into is known as initial margin.


• Marking-to-market: In the futures market, at the end of each trading day, the margin ac-count is adjusted to reflect the investor’s gain or loss depending upon the futures closing price. This is called marking–to–market.


• Maintenance margin: This is somewhat lower than the initial margin. This is set to ensure that the balance in the margin account never becomes negative. If the balance in the margin account falls below the maintenance margin, the investor receives a margin call and is expected to top up the margin account to the initial margin level before trading commences on the next day.
 

rosemarry2

MP Guru
Futures Terminology

• Spot price: The price at which an asset trades in the spot market.


• Futures price: The price at which the futures contract trades in the futures market.


• Contract cycle: The period over which a contract trades. The index futures contracts on the NSE have one-month, two-months and three-months expiry cycles, which expire on the last Thursday of the month. Thus a January expiration contract expires on the last Thursday of January and a February expiration contract ceases trading on the last Thursday of February. On the Friday following the last Thursday, a new contract having a three-month expiry is introduced for trading.


• Expiry date: It is the date specified in the futures contract. This is the last day on which the contract will be traded, at the end of which it will cease to exist.


• Contract size: The amount of asset that has to be delivered under one contract. For in-stance, the contract size on NSE’s futures market is 200 Nifties.


• Basis: In the context of financial futures, basis can be defined as the futures price minus the spot price. There will be a different basis for each delivery month for each contract. In a normal market, basis will be positive. This reflects that futures prices normally exceed spot prices.


• Cost of carry: The relationship between futures prices and spot prices can be summarized in terms of what is known as the cost of carry. This measures the storage cost plus the interest that is paid to finance the asset less the income earned on the asset.


• Initial margin: The amount that must be deposited in the margin account at the time a futures contract is first entered into is known as initial margin.


• Marking-to-market: In the futures market, at the end of each trading day, the margin ac-count is adjusted to reflect the investor’s gain or loss depending upon the futures closing price. This is called marking–to–market.


• Maintenance margin: This is somewhat lower than the initial margin. This is set to ensure that the balance in the margin account never becomes negative. If the balance in the margin account falls below the maintenance margin, the investor receives a margin call and is expected to top up the margin account to the initial margin level before trading commences on the next day.

Hey there,

Please check attachment for Futures and Options Terminology by Derrell S. Peel, so please download and check it.
 

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