Title: ECON 337:
1ECON 337 Agricultural Marketing
Chad Hart Associate Professor chart_at_iastate.edu 51
5-294-9911
Lee Schulz Assistant Professor lschulz_at_iastate.edu
515-294-3356
2Futures Markets
- Organized and centralized market
- Todays price for products to be delivered in the
future - A mechanism of trading promises of future
commodity deliveries among traders
3Futures and Options
- Market tools to help manage (share) price risks
- Mechanisms to establish commodity trades among
participants at a future time - Available from commodity exchanges / futures
markets
4Agricultural Futures Markets
- Has some unique features due to the nature of
agricultural businesses - Supply comes online a few times during the year
- So at harvest, supply spikes, then diminishes
until the next harvest - Production decisions are based price forecasts
- Planting decisions can be made a full year (or
more) before the crop price is realized - Users provide year-round demand
- Livestock feeding, biofuel production, food demand
5Futures Market Exchanges
- Competitive markets
- Open out-cry and electronic trading
- Centralized pricing
- Buyers and sellers are both in the market
- Relevant information is conveyed through the bids
and offers for the trades - Bid the price at which a trader would buy the
commodity - Offer the price at which a trader would sell
the commodity
6CME Group
- http//www.cmegroup.com/
- Products
- Agricultural commodities
- Corn, soy, cattle, hogs, etc.
- Energy
- Currency
- Metals
- Weather
- Others
7Futures Contracts
- A legally binding contract to make or take
delivery of the commodity - Trading the promise to do something in the future
- You can offset your promise
- Standardized contract
- Form (weight, grade, specifications)
- Time (delivery date)
- Place (delivery location)
8Soybean Futures
- Form
- 5,000 bushels
- No. 2 Yellow Soybeans (at price), No. 1 Yellow
soybeans (at 6 cents over price), and No. 3
Yellow Soybeans (at 6 cents under price) - Time
- Contract months Sept, Nov, Jan, Mar, May, July,
and August
Source CME Group
9Soybean Futures
Partial listing of delivery points
Source CME Group Rulebook
10Delivery Points
Corn
Soybeans
Wheat
Source Irwin, Garcia, Good, and Kunda,
2009 Marketing and Outlook Research Report 2009-02
11Futures Contracts
- No physical exchange takes place when the
contract is traded (no actual commodity moves) - Payment is based on the price established when
the contract was initially traded (prices can and
will change before delivery is taken) - Deliveries can be made when the contract expires
or the offsetting futures position must be taken
to settle up - Deliveries occur on less than 5 percent of the
traded contracts
12Market Positions
- You can either buy or sell initially to open a
position in the futures market - Make a promise to make or take delivery
- Do the opposite to close the position at a later
date - Offset the promise (and no commodity changes
hands) - Trader may also hold the position until
expiration and make or take physical delivery of
the commodity
13Trading Futures Contracts
- All trades through a licensed broker
- Brokerage house has a seat at the exchange and
is allowed to trade - Represented on the floor to exercise trade
- Local broker to initiate transaction and manage
account with client - Full service and discount brokers
14CME Group
- http//www.cmegroup.com/
- Open, High, Low, Last Price
- Settlement Price
- Volume
- Open Interest
- Daily Limits
15Terms and Definitions
- Basis
- The difference between the spot or cash price and
the futures price of the same or a related
commodity. - Bear
- Someone that thinks the price will decline
- Bull
- Someone that thinks the price will increase
16Cash vs. Futures Prices
Iowa Corn in 2013
The gap between the lines is the basis.
172013 Basis for Iowa Corn
18Terms and Definitions
- Clearing House
- The division of the futures exchange through
which all trades made must be confirmed, matched
and settled each day until offset or delivered. - Commission
- For futures contracts, the one-time fee charged
by a broker to cover the trades you make to open
and close each position.
19Terms and Definitions
- Long position
- A position in which the trader has bought a
futures contract that does not offset a
previously established short position. - Short position
- A position in which the trader has sold a futures
contract that does not offset a previously
established long position.
20Going Short
Sold Dec. 2014 Corn _at_ 4.55
What type of trader (bull or bear) would go short?
What events would send prices in a favorable
direction?
21Going Long
What type of trader (bull or bear) would go long?
Bought Nov. 2014 Soybeans _at_ 11.20
What events would send prices in a favorable
direction?
22- Class web site
- http//www.econ.iastate.edu/chart/Classes/econ337
/Spring2014/ - Have a great weekend!